Rabu, 17 Oktober 2012

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Fans outraged at soaring Rolling Stones ticket prices

Posted: 17 Oct 2012 08:57 AM PDT

LONDON, Oct 17 — Rolling Stones fans reacted with fury today at the steep cost of tickets for the British band's 50th anniversary shows, while prices soared to thousands of pounds on re-sale websites.

After months of rumours, the Stones announced on Monday that they would play two nights at London's 02 Arena on November 25 and 29, followed by gigs at New Jersey's Newark Prudential Centre, just outside New York, on December 13 and 15.

But hundreds of fans have taken to the Internet to complain about the ticket prices, with a seat for the London shows costing £406 (RM1,990) on the official ticket website.

Fans' sentiment could not be too far off this official promo.©All Rights Reserved

But hundreds of fans have taken to the Internet to complain about the ticket prices, with a seat for the London shows costing £406 (RM1,990) on the official ticket website.

Premium tickets have subsequently appeared on re-sale websites for more than £13,000 each.

The cheapest seats on the official site, costing £106, appeared to be sold out today.

"These prices are a joke," fan Steve Grace wrote in a comment appearing on the official See Tickets website. "To expect this sort of money just makes me lose a lot of respect for these guys."

Drachan Forster added on the site: "Saw them in Rio at a free concert. Was pickpocketed relentlessly throughout, but nothing compares to this fleecing. £246 for some of the worse seated tickets in the house. Disgusting."

By today, seats at the front of the 20,000-capacity 02 Arena were listed on the Get Me In re-sale website for up to £13,200 each.

Many fans protested online that the band should have rewarded their fans for their loyalty over the past half-century with cheaper shows.

"Considering these guys started off as a working-class set of lads, these prices are well out of reach of the ordinary working man," Chrissi Matusevics posted on Facebook.

American Express customers gained advance access to tickets for the London shows on Monday, followed today by subscribers to the band's mailing list and users of Britain's O2 mobile phone network.

The tickets go on general sale in Britain on Friday.

Hospitality package tickets for the two US shows go on pre-sale on Saturday, ahead of a wider pre-sale next Monday and a general release on October 26.

Frontman Mick Jagger, 69, told BBC radio on Monday that the four concerts would be followed by a longer string of dates, yet to be announced.

US music magazine Billboard reported in August that Jagger and bandmates Charlie Watts, Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood will earn a total of US$25 million (RM76.3 million) for the four shows. — AFP/Relaxnews

A minute with: Sienna Miller on Hitchcock’s obsessions

Posted: 17 Oct 2012 07:10 AM PDT

NEW YORK, Oct 17 — In the words of Alfred Hitchcock, "Blondes make the best victims".

But while the great British director's preference for blondes has been documented, new film "The Girl" narrows in on one particular obsession — actress Tippi Hedren, whom he handpicked to star in his 1960s movies "The Birds" and "Marnie".

The film, premiering on Saturday on US cable channel HBO, offers a cinematic tale of Hedren's version of how Hitchcock, played by Toby Jones, launched her career, and, after she refused his sexual advances, eventually killed it.

Sienna Miller talks about Hitchcock's advances on Tippi Hedren, and what they might do to his legacy. — Reuters file pic

Sienna Miller spoke to Reuters about portraying Hedren, whether "The Girl" will change Hitchcock's legacy and whether the film world still allows for such abuses of power.

Q: Does Tippi Hedren, now 82, still feel Hitchcock ruined her career?

A: "Well, she absolutely does feel that, because he did. She is at the same time very complimentary about him, and as a director no one is disputing the fact that he was incredible at what he does. And also he taught her how to act and she is very indebted to him for that — to learn from the master. But yes, he was really responsible for damaging her career and of course there is resentment that comes with that."

Q: Tell us about the emotions she was going through while filming "The Birds" and "Marnie" and coping with his advances.

A: "She was trying desperately to keep her head afloat, to do the job, just to walk the moral line, to not react, to not capitulate to his demands, or desires, whilst remaining respectful to this incredible filmmaker that she was working for. But I think she gradually became more and more ostracised from everyone and people on the set were seeing this behaviour ... and turning a blind eye, which was completely isolating."

Q: Will this depiction of Hitchcock ruffle any feathers?

A: "If you really watch the film, you leave feeling empathy for both characters — at least that is the way that I feel when I watch it. But he was very threatening towards her.

"With the Hitchcock films, these personality traits are alluded to in the films that he made. I don't think it is any surprise that he was misogynistic, you only had to watch 'Marnie' ... It is a film about a man who definitely has a dark side, hence the incredible film that he made. There is certainly no question that he was a genius, but this is just one woman and her account of her experiences working with him."

Q: What about his legacy — will the film alter it?

A: "I think his films will remain some of the greatest films ever made and he will always be heralded as one of the greatest directors of all time. But often with geniuses, there is a kind of dark side and that is nothing new. I don't think it will have any profound effect on his legacy as a director or a filmmaker."

Q: Hitchcock was famously obsessed with blondes in an era of Grace Kelly and Brigitte Bardot.

A: "There is a quote in the film, I can't remember it exactly, but he said that 'Blondes make the best victims'. I think that is what he liked about them."

Q: They did a good job giving Toby Jones Hitchcock's jowls.

A: "He had four hours in prosthetics, which I think was not too pleasant."

Q: The film shows how actors at that time were beholden to studios and directors. Have we changed so much today?

A: "You hear stories, but nothing that I have ever experienced, no. I think it is a very different world, and in the past, women needed men in order to have any form of career, especially during that era, and now we are not as reliant upon men for everything. You don't need to support the man in order to get somewhere. The studio system is also very different, but I have never come across — although you hear stories of casting couches — but that is nothing I will ever experience, hopefully."

Q: And yet it still happens. What needs to change?

A: "I don't think it's specific to the movie world, it is probably in all walks of life. Obviously, it is a terrible situation for anyone young and hoping to go places. I know that Tippi feels that. She hopes that people who watch this film will have the courage and stand up and say, 'This happened to me' and expose the darker sides of all industries." — Reuters

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