Home Blog Page 4440

Rui En tackles toughest role yet in C.L.I.F. 4 – motherhood

0

Go ahead and give her firearms and fight scenes, but when it comes to babies, Rui En would rather say no.

The 35-year-old local actress has acted with babies on her TV shows and judging by accounts of her past experiences, the poor infants may not have been the only ones bawling on set.

In an interview with The New Paper yesterday at the lensing ceremony of Channel 8 cop drama C.L.I.F. 4, Rui En said frankly: “Three things I don’t like working with are babies, animals and calefare (bit-part actors). (Babies) do what they want to do. They do not care that the camera is rolling, so it can be difficult.”

But it is a challenge she will have to undertake for C.L.I.F. 4, in which she reprises her role as Criminal Investigation Department officer Huang Zhijie, whose husband is fellow cop Wei Lantian (Li Nanxing).

In the fourth season, which premieres on Sept 6 at 9pm, the pair play parents to a four-month-old infant. Rui En said of her character: “She has her responsibilities at work and has to handle motherhood.

“It will be interesting to portray the struggle of work-life balance and how to deal with the fatigue… (but she’s still) very professional.

“I have complete respect and admiration for mums.”

RHYTHM

On reuniting with Li, 51, after playing a couple since C.L.I.F.’s second season, Rui En said: “We work very well together.

“Even if we have not worked together for a while, it is not difficult to get back (into) the rhythm.”

But what she is looking forward to the most in the new season is filming a fight scene with a female opponent who has martial arts experience.

She said: “I haven’t done an action scene in so long. But my dance background should help.”

Fans will be able to catch Rui En at the Star Awards next month. The two-part awards show will be shown live on Channel 8 at 5.30pm on April 17 and at 7pm on April 24.

This year, she is nominated in three categories: Best Actress (The Dream Makers 2), Favourite Female Character (The Dream Makers 2) and Favourite Onscreen Couple (with Qi Yuwu in The Dream Makers 2 and with Shaun Chen in The Journey: Our Homeland).

When asked about her chances, she said she does not think too much about them. But she is honoured to receive the All-Time Favourite Artiste award, which is given to those who have won the Top 10 Most Popular Female or Male Artiste award 10 times, and she called the award a “milestone of blood, sweat and tears”.

Although her “black face” at last year’s Star Awards Show 1 inadvertently stole the show and made headlines, she denied that the incident will make her more self-conscious at this year’s ceremony.

She said in her usual nonchalant manner: “I’m just gonna be myself.”

(Babies) do what they want to do. They do not care that the camera is rolling, so it can be difficult.

– Rui En, on the challenge of working with babies on set

YA HUI ON TARGET WITH NEW ROLE

For a newbie on a cop show, local actress Ya Hui has surprisingly remarkable marksmanship.

During her first firearms training session for C.L.I.F. 4, she shot her target with a pistol 19 out of 20 times, she said with pride.

However, this proficiency did not come immediately to the 28-year-old.

Her co-star, Li Nanxing, had fired the first shot and it was so loud that even with the protective gear covering her ears, it was a shock to Ya Hui.

“It was beyond my imagination,” she told The New Paper yesterday.

But her instructor managed to calm her down.

Ya Hui (left) plays police investigator Wang Shishi, who gets caught in a love triangle with her roommate Cai Yanqi (Mei Xin) and fellow police officer Chen Yu (Zhang Yaodong).

HAPPY

Ya Hui said: “I’m happy to be able to act as a police officer for the first time. Shishi is positive and outgoing, but when it comes to work, she’s serious and smart.

“I hope more women will join the police force… I think they can do it well.”

Ya Hui, who has enjoyed a breakout year, has, for the first time, been nominated for Best Actress at the Star Awards next month for her role as lovable wonton noodle hawker Hong Jinzhi in 118.

She said that because she is filming another series, I Want To Be A Star, she has no time to worry too much about the results.

“Getting the award or not depends on the judges. I put my best effort in my work and I’ve done my part. It is a huge encouragement to work even harder for future projects,” she said.

danchim@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on March 25, 2016.
Get The New Paper for more stories.

Image: 
Category: 
Publication Date: 
Saturday, March 26, 2016 – 01:00
Send to mobile app: 
Source: 



Story Type: 
Others

Source link

Five arrested, more than 2kg of drugs seized in CNB operation

0

March 25, 2016 3:34 PM

SINGAPORE – Five people have been arrested and more than 2kg of drugs worth an estimated $156,000 were seized in a Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) operation on Thursday.



Source link

Batman V Superman: Never mind the silly story, beefiness is all that counts

0

Zack Snyder doesn’t make movies for people; he makes them for bros. Or dudes. Or dudebros. And video game players. Which is why I found the experience of watching Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice(PG13, 152 minutes, now showing, ) a lot like walking into the winning team’s locker room after a rugby match. It’s sweaty, grunty, loud, self-congratulatory and, if movies had smells, pungent.

Director Snyder hates story. They get in the way of the important stuff, like having two sets of fists punch their way to emotional closure.

That is why you never understand why Batman (Ben Affleck) hates Superman so much that he wants the Man Of Steel (Henry Cavill) dead. Bruce Wayne does mutter something to Alfred (Jeremy Irons) about saving the world from unchecked power, but nowhere in the script does it have Wayne pause to question his own right to vigilantism.

That would be thoughtful and having self-awareness is not what this movie is about. For example, there is a long Rocky-style montage in which Wayne works out, in the most manly way possible – not with actual gym equipment (that would be for wussies) but with lorry tyres.

He is developing abs so he can be fitter, to beat up a guy who can crush a small planet between his arms. How many push-ups would it take? What timing on the 2.4 km run would be enough?

Displays of beefiness, in all its forms, are the point, sense be damned.

The plot is dead simple, but in between there is a lot of stuff that Snyder thinks is deep, such as arguments about how as Foreign Talent, the Kryptonian ubermensch cannot be trusted, even with his superhero Employment Pass. He is Donald Trump’s worst nightmare, stealing jobs from local costumed vigilantes.

Another dead-end sub-thread is his liability for the battle damage to Metropolis, caused by the events of Man Of Steel (2013).

Real journalists are enlisted to spell out the arguments on televisions in the background, announcing – no, hammering you over the head with how important these moral and political issues are, so that you will go home believing you got smarter watching this, instead of dumber. If you saw Snyder’s Watchmen (2009), this first-year philosophy course stuff is old hat.

In any case, both threads vanish in a puff of smoke midway, to make way for another incomprehensible thread, when Lex Luthor (Jesse Eisenberg) kicks off his plan for… what, it’s never clear. But never mind, there’s a mini-ad in there for upcoming franchises Aquaman and The Flash, so book your tickets early.

The climax of the film is an ear-splitting fight, in which one set of computer pixels fights another set of computer pixels, but what happens is never clear because Snyder likes flicker edits, dark shadows, smoke and camera lenses with a coating of grime.

But you walk away with a sense-impression that something big hit something bigger and then everything blew up.

The battles are like the ending of this movie – Snyder can’t decide what he wants so he puts everything in, creating three false endings before the credits roll.

For a film that is aware of its own silliness, and revels in it, try Pee-Wee’s Big Holiday (PG, 90 minutes, now showing on Netflix, ) – if you can put aside the strangeness of watching Paul Reubens, a 63-year-old man, play a child in everything but appearance.

The first movie featuring the Pee-Wee character in almost three decades sees Reubens meet movie star Joe Manganiello (playing himself), who convinces the eternal boy to break his vow of never leaving his hometown, Fairville. Pee-Wee heads out to New York City and immediately runs into trouble on the road.

A lot of the jokes are physical, and not just from Pee-Wee’s Rube Goldberg contraptions.

There’s plenty of surreal fun in Fairville, a town that stayed in the 1950s while the rest of American moved on.

Pee-Wee’s mix of Pollyanna optimism and ignorance about the modern world drives the comedy – fans of the sister Netflix show Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt will see a resemblance between Kimmy and Pee-Wee.

Kimmy’s world is more grounded in reality than Pee-Wee’s, but both feature plenty of sweetness and an anarchic sense of fun, providing some respite in a comedy landscape littered with too much snark.

johnlui@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on March 25, 2016.
Get a copy of The Straits Times or go to straitstimes.com for more stories.

Image: 
Category: 
Publication Date: 
Saturday, March 26, 2016 – 01:00
Send to mobile app: 
Source: 



Story Type: 
Others

Source link

Quiznos Sub Closing All Outlets in Singapore From 31 Mar 2016 | SINGPromos.com

0

Quiznos Singapore will be closing all outlets in Singapore from 31 Mar

Quiznos Sub Closing All Outlets in Singapore From 31 Mar 2016 | SINGPromos.com

Quiznos sub will be closing its doors in Singapore soon. You still have time to visit their outlets before they officially close all outlets from 31 March

Source

Religious duel in Japan: Pastor rock vs. Buddhist monk blues

0

Tokyo – Most days, Lutheran pastor Kazuhiro Sekino preaches to his congregation in a soft voice with religious hymns playing in the background of a Tokyo church.

But as night falls, he hits a smoky stage criss-crossed with whizzing strobe lights, shedding his pious day job in a battle of the bands against a group of Buddhist monks.

“We are rock, pastors are rock!” Sekino, 36, shouts into a microphone to stir up the several hundred concert-goers.

The band, “Boxi Rocks” – the name is a play on the Japanese word for pastor – features Sekino and three other pastors, who don church robes during their raucous performances, sometimes with a leather jacket thrown over top.

“I like Slipknot, a real hard rock band that has nine masked members. I also like Metallica and Megadeth,” a soft-spoken Sekino told AFP.

“They may look demonic from the Christian church’s point of view, but they are actually shouting to fight the world’s injustice. They talk about truth, no hypocrisy.”

Monk Yoshinobu Fujioka – head shaved and wearing a dark blue kimono – hits back with an acoustic guitar offering as head of the Bozu (monk) band.

“I love the Blues. I love Bob Dylan and sixties music,” said the 39-year-old.

“Living a worldly life, we always get hurt by pains and suffering which make us feel small. I like to sing about that pain in a tender way.”

The unlikely pair hope their musical duels help them reach more people in a country where Buddhists far outnumber Christians.

Figures released by the government based on data supplied by temples, churches and shrines show that Buddhism accounts for about 46 per cent of religious followers, while Christians make up less than two per cent. About 48 per cent, meanwhile, follow Japan’s native Shinto religion.

But for many Japanese, religion of any sort is more of a seasonal formality, paying homage at a shrine or celebrating Christmas.

“We’re actually performing secular music. We have feelings just like other people and use the same language, sometimes even more crass,” said Sekino, who turned to heavenly work after his sister became critically ill.

“But I want people to know that God lives there (in people’s lives). I want to share this.” Fujioka and his fellow monk-cum-rockers also opened a bar in Tokyo, where they offer another outlet for troubled visitors seeking a better life – over cocktails.

“There are many people who want to talk about their problems and go home with a lighter heart. It’s our responsibility to meet with people like that,” he said.

Sekino initially contacted the monk about his quirky idea for musical evangelism and now they perform several times a year – with backing from above.

“I don’t know if I should call this heaven or nirvana, but I think this is what the God would want to see – this is something the church or a temple couldn’t do.”

Category: 
Publication Date: 
Friday, March 25, 2016 – 15:00
Send to mobile app: 
Source: 



Rotator Image: 
video embed code: 
<iframe width="100%" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/E9lEtdRji2w" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Video Media: 
Other Video Media
Story Type: 
Others

Source link

'Unusually high number' of dogs dumped in a short time: Animal welfare groups

0

SPCA took in eight small pedigree dogs over two days. Voices for Animals says it appears to be “dumping season” as it was notified of a total of 17 abandoned dogs in the span of 48 hours, including the dogs taken in by SPCA.

Source link

North Korea threatens South's Blue House as tensions persist

0

SEOUL – North and South Korea, locked for weeks in exchanges of angry rhetoric and heightened military readiness, traded more threats on Friday, with Pyongyang saying its military had trained to attack Seoul’s presidential Blue House.

Isolated North Korea is renowned for its sabre-rattling, and often makes threats of attack and even annihilation against South Korea and the United States.

However, its tone has been especially belligerent in recent weeks and personally aimed at South Korean President Park Geun-hye following her warnings of regime collapse in Pyongyang after it conducted a nuclear test and rocket launch earlier this year.

North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un guided what state media said on Friday was the North’s largest ever exercise of long-range artillery training, with a simulated attack on South Korea’s presidential and government offices.

Kim ordered his military to be on high alert “so that it may mercilessly pound the reactionary ruling machines in Seoul, the cesspool of evils, and advance to accomplish the historic cause of national reunification, once it receives an order for attack,” the official KCNA news agency said.

Tensions have been high on the Korean peninsula since the North conducted a nuclear test in January and a long-range rocket launch in February, which prompted new sanctions earlier this month by the United Nations Security Council. Annual US-South Korea military exercises, which are ongoing, have added to the jitters.

The tensions also come ahead of a rare congress of the North’s ruling Workers’ Party in May. Some analysts expects Kim to claim a signature achievement, such as another nuclear test, in the run-up to the congress as he looks to bolster his stature at home.

Park warned the North to end provocative actions and “escape from the illusion” that it will benefit from nuclear armament, ordering her country’s military to maintain “maximum combat power.”

“Reckless provocation will be the road to destruction for the North’s regime,” Park said at an anniversary event for the 2010 sinking of a naval ship that killed 46 people. The South blames the sinking on a torpedo attack by the North, which denies any role.

The North conducted its fourth nuclear test in January, saying that it had successfully tested a hydrogen bomb although many experts doubt the claim.

But some US intelligence analysts now believe the North”probably” possesses a miniaturised nuclear warhead, CNN reported on Friday, citing several unnamed US officials, although the assessment is not the consensus view of the US government.

But even those officials say they still do not know if such a device would actually work, CNN said.

Rocket experts have said the North has yet to demonstrate it can launch a ballistic missile mounted with a nuclear warhead that can sustain the stress of atmospheric re-entry and then be guided to hit a target with reliability.

Image: 
Category: 
Publication Date: 
Friday, March 25, 2016 – 14:46
Send to mobile app: 
Source: 



Story Type: 
Others

Source link

The rise of on-demand viewing divides Hollywood

0

Los Angeles – Hollywood’s traditional media players are facing an unprecedented challenge to their business model as “cord-cutters” opt to cancel their expensive cable subscriptions in favour of on-demand streaming services.

While pay-TV providers continue to charge well in excess of $50 (S$69) a month for the top packages, Netflix, Hulu and Amazon are serving up an ever-growing menu of acclaimed original content for the price of a cheap bottle of wine.

Cable may still be king when it comes to the breadth of choice, but streaming on-demand video (SVOD) hits like “House of Cards” and “Orange is the New Black,” with 49 Emmy nominations between them, are competing on quality.

Earlier this month California-based payment service provider Vindicia published the results of a survey of 1,000 American adults who had at least one paid subscription service.

Some 45 per cent of respondents cited “over-the-top” (OTT) video services such as HBO Now, Netflix and Hulu as most important to them.

Crucially, more than half of the key “millennial” generation – those in their 20s and 30s ardently courted by the advertisers – said they used SVOD.

Research by global media consultancy LEK published in January showed a similar pattern in Britain, where the majority of millennials expecting to get OTT in the next year were planning to cancel or reduce their pay-TV spending.

“In this increasingly on-demand world, the quality of content will be more important than ever before,” said Martin Pilkington, head of LEK’s European Media, Entertainment and Technology division.

“The race is already on, a good illustration of the new dynamic being the very high level of investment in original content by Netflix and Amazon.”

While Netflix remains the largest SVOD service, Amazon is staking its own claim, with “Transparent” and “Mozart in the Jungle” picking up multiple Emmys and Golden Globes.

Hulu has been slower to roll out original content, but recently premiered “11.22.63,” a time-travel series produced by J.J. Abrams, with religious cult drama “The Path” due out on March 30 and already creating buzz.

“I could tell on the page there was no way we could do this on one of the networks,” said Jessica Goldberg, creator of “The Path,” which stars Aaron Paul of “Breaking Bad” fame.

“Hulu came to the table in such a passionate way. They saw what we wanted to make, they let us push the envelope, they let us take time and breathe with stories. So it has been an amazing marriage.”

Goldberg, who co-produced the Emmy-nominated “Parenthood” drama series, told AFP she had noticed a big shift to SVOD among friends, and not just with original content like “The Path.”

“It seems like that’s what people are doing now – even watching shows (from) other cable stations but waiting until they are on Netflix or Hulu because they’d rather watch them like that,” she said.

The revolution isn’t confined to television, with the shift towards an on-demand world redefining the way we access services in many other aspects of our lives.

In the 2015 edition of its influential “Internet Trends” report, venture capitalist firm Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield and Byers noted the increasing popularity among millennials of apps like Uber, Airbnb and Instacart.

Streaming has emerged as a threat to cinemas, too, in the guise of the controversial start-up “Screening Room,” which is planning to offer movies in people’s homes on the date of their theatrical release.

At $50 per rental plus $150 for a set-top box, it remains to be seen whether the idea, led by social media impresario Sean Parker, will be of interest to anyone who isn’t a film buff, or rich.

But it already lists among its shareholders such Tinseltown royalty as Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson, who said in a statement to Variety magazine he was satisfied the service was “very carefully designed to capture an audience that does not currently go to the cinema.”

According to the proposal, theatre owners and studios would collect as much as $20 each of the $50 fee for a new movie.

Every innovation in home entertainment – from the introduction of video and then DVDs to high speed 4G broadband – has been accompanied by shrill predictions of the death of cinema.

Yet US audiences have been roughly stable over 50 years, while North American box office takings have remained between $10 billion and $11 billion since 2009.

The cinemas have closed ranks, however.

The National Association of Theater Owners said innovations should come from within the industry and the smaller Art House Convergence group of specialty theatres warned of a possible “wildfire spread of pirated content.”

Image: 
Category: 
Publication Date: 
Friday, March 25, 2016 – 14:38
Send to mobile app: 
Source: 



Story Type: 
Others

Source link

Singapore Promotions

0

BUDGET 2016: List of New Measures & Policies for Households #sgbudget2016

Singapore Promotions

Source

OMGtel aims to be No. 2 telco, cut roaming charges

0

Singapore’s fourth telco contender OMGTel has promised to remove pricey roaming charges and stray signals from Indonesia, and improve spotty network coverage, as it finalises $400 million worth of funding to help its bid for a licence.

The subsidiary of Consistel, which set up the Sports Hub’s wireless systems, is hoping to raise a total of $1 billion to build a brand new 4G network islandwide.

“We’re close to securing 40 per cent of the total funding,” Consistel and OMGTel chairman Masoud Bassiri said yesterday. “We have serious investment offers. We only have to sign the papers.”

He would not disclose investor details, citing “intense rivalry”.

The company is confident of raising $1 billion by the third quarter of this year, when the official auction for mobile airwaves is expected to take place.

New entrants will be offered 60 MHz worth of mobile frequencies at a discount of 45 per cent, or at a reserve price of $35 million. The potential fourth telco could launch its services as early as April next year.

OMGTel’s newly appointed chief executive officer Bill Amelio, a technology veteran, said it will be “aggressive and hungry” in the upcoming auction.

Another fourth telco hopeful MyRepublic, a local fibre broadband services provider, is expected to contest.

UOB Kay Hian director of research Jonathan Koh said the upcoming auction will be “the liveliest in 14 years” as no new company had expressed any interest in entering the Singapore market.

Should OMGTel win mobile airwaves in the auction to become the fourth operator here, it said it will compete on talk-time, roaming charges and contract length as well as network quality.

“We can deliver consistent coverage as you walk from the carpark to the lift and into buildings and trains. Right now, coverage is very choppy,” said Mr Bassiri.

Meanwhile, MyRepublic said it would charge consumers as little as $8 a month for a mobile plan should it become the fourth telco.

Former Cabinet minister George Yeo, who is OMGTel’s adviser, said: “Singapore does need a fourth operator, given the state of technological development in the world. Today, people get a bill shock when they forget to switch off auto-roaming. We should be in a world where these things are like water and electricity; you pay a fixed rate and the marginal cost is zero.”

OMGTel claimed it could roll out its network islandwide as early as the end of next year using its proprietary automation software for indoor network planning, among other systems. It is also targeting to unseat StarHub as the No. 2 mobile operator in Singapore.

StarHub chief marketing officer Howie Lau said: “Competition is not new to us, and we will continue to build on our strengths.”

SEAMLESS NETWORK COVERAGE

We can deliver consistent coverage as you walk from the carpark to the lift and into buildings and trains. Right now, coverage is very choppy. ”

itham@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on March 25, 2016.
Get a copy of The Straits Times or go to straitstimes.com for more stories.

Image: 
Publication Date: 
Saturday, March 26, 2016 – 07:30
Send to mobile app: 
Source: 



Story Type: 
Others

Source link