Rabu, 9 November 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


A Minute With: Mickey Rourke talking ‘Immortals’

Posted: 09 Nov 2011 06:09 AM PST

LOS ANGELES, Nov 9 – Mickey Rourke, known for years as a Hollywood bad boy, was perhaps the perfect choice to portray a bad boy of Greek mythology, brutal King Hyperion, in the 3D action movie "Immortals" opening in theatres on Friday.

Directed by Tarsem Singh, the movie sees Rourke's evil king on a murderous mission to vanquish both humankind and the Gods of Olympus. But he meets his match in a young stone mason named Theseus (Henry Cavill) who wants to avenge his mother's death.

With the help of an Oracle (Freida Pinto) Theseus learns that it is also his destiny to stop Hyperion and save mankind.

Rourke (picture) spoke about the film, overcoming his bad boy reputation and his beloved chihuahuas.

Q: King Hyperion is physically imposing and wears intricate face masks that almost look like weapons themselves. Was it a challenge wearing all that gear?

A: "There was a lot of stuff to put on. The shoes were 12 pounds (5.4 kgs) – apiece. It took three wardrobe assistants to put on each little piece of paraphernalia because it was all layered."

Q: How was the shoot itself?

A: "I had just had bicep surgery in Heidelberg, Germany. I tore my bicep and the operation didn't work. Three weeks after the operation I lost my whole tendon, then the movie started. We shot during a sort of rehabilitation period for me so I wasn't really able to do much."

Q: Did getting a best actor Oscar nomination in 2009 for "The Wrestler" change things for you in Hollywood?

A: "Probably to a degree. The reputation I had for 20 years about being difficult and unprofessional is always going to stay. A lot of it was true, but I'm not really that way anymore. I am my own man, and I'm never going to just march to anybody's beat. But I was out of work for 12 years because of the mistakes I made. I don't blame anybody else but myself. I can't make the same mistakes again. I'd be foolish. Those years out of work were a terrible, lonely, pathetic, desperate time."

Q: Now that you have this new lease on your career, how can you sustain it so you don't lose it again?

A: "Well, it's a younger generation of directors and producers that I'm working with. Its not all the people that I (upset) so terribly. Most of those are out of the business or retired, thank God. The young filmmakers are fearless. (Darren) Arnonofsky, (Robert) Rodriguez, Tarsem (Singh), they don't care what people said about me 20 years ago."

Q: You're known for your love of chihuahuas – your 18-year-old Loki passed away just days before the 2009 Oscar ceremony. How's life without her?

A: "I'm never going to be over her. You have that 18 and a-half year relationship. It's the longest I've had with anyone, with anything. When they wanted to give me a star on Hollywood Boulevard, I said 'I'll take it if they can put Loki's name there too.' They said 'no,' so I said 'no. If I can't have Loki's name there, I don't want my name there'."

Q: Your next project is a screenplay you wrote called "The Beautiful Game," the real story of Gareth Thomas, the Welsh rugby star who announced he was gay. Where are you at with that?

A: "I've been training for six months physically and will train another six, then take three months to work on the Welsh accent. Hopefully by the end of March we can shoot in Wales."

Q: From a professional boxing career to starring in movies about wrestling and now rugby – you really gravitate towards sports, don't you?

A: "That's what I love the most and that's what I miss the most. When you get to an age where you're getting too old to play sports or you can't play like you used to, it's a terrible feeling. You feel like you're slowly decaying. This will be the last time that I'm going to be able to get it up – one last time to get physical – at a point where I could still be respectable."

Q: What do you want your legacy to be?

A: "I don't want one. When I'm dead and gone, I won't care what they say about me." – Reuters

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Hundreds of thousands pay tribute to Indian singer

Posted: 09 Nov 2011 03:30 AM PST

Mourners follow the body of India's folk singer Bhupen Hazarika during his funeral procession on the outskirts of Guwahati in the northeastern state of Assam November 9, 2011. Hundreds of thousands of mourners, including Bollywood stars and politicians, gathered on Wednesday for the cremation of one of India's most famous folk singers, Hazarika, who helped popularise the culture of the country's remote northeast. – Reuters pic

GUWAHATI, Nov 9 – Hundreds of thousands of mourners, including Bollywood stars and politicians, gathered today for the cremation of one of India's most famous folk singers, Bhupen Hazarika, who helped popularise the culture of the country's remote northeast.

Known for portraying the social life of Assam and speaking for the poor, the 85-year-old Hazarika was a poet, composer, singer, author and film-maker.

"In Dr Hazarika's sad demise, India has lost one of its most gifted artists," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in a statement.

Hazarika died in Mumbai on Saturday.

Thousands of his admirers broke into tears while slogans of "Bhupen da amor houk" (May brother Bhupen be immortal) rang in the air as his body was carried through the city to be cremated on an open pyre.

More than half-a-million people have visited the stadium where he often played and where his body had been kept since Monday.

Born in 1926 in Assam, he got a PhD from Columbia University and played across Europe, the United States and Asia.

Famous for his baritone voice and heart-rending lyrics, Hazarika helped to bring his northeastern homeland to the attention of the rest of India and beyond.

Music lovers called him the Bard of the Brahmaputra, a river that runs through Assam. He also contested unsuccessfully national elections in 2004 as a candidate for the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party. – Reuters

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