Rabu, 27 Februari 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views


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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views


A Minute With: Gabriel Byrne’s TV Viking chieftain

Posted: 27 Feb 2013 08:05 AM PST

February 28, 2013

NEW YORK, Feb 27 — Irish actor Gabriel Byrne is going into battle as an 8th century Viking chieftain in History Channel's new nine-part scripted TV series "Vikings", starting on Sunday.

Irish actor Gabriel Byrne is going into battle as an 8th century Viking chieftain in History Channel's new nine-part scripted TV series "Vikings". — Reuters picByrne's elder statesman Earl Haraldson is also locked in a power struggle with the adventurous young Ragnar Lothbrook,(Travis Fimmel) who is looking for new worlds to conquer in the Irish/Canadian historical co-production that explores the world of the mighty Norse warriors.

Byrne, best known as the sympathetic therapist Paul Weston in HBO's series "In Treatment" and movie "The Usual Suspects," spoke with Reuters about the importance of storytelling and why we're more similar to the Viking culture than we may realize.

Q: What do you think will draw viewers to "Vikings"?

A: It is a tremendously exciting story, and because it's the History Channel, there will be many facts, rituals, battles and costumes that people will be intrigued to learn about. I also think people will begin to see the connection between ancient history and modern politics. And you recognize that maybe technology has changed, and maybe the way we live our lives has changed, but essentially human beings are not that different. We still make love and we make war, and we still have the need to conquer. We just do it with more effective weapons now.

Q: Women seem to have a prominent role in the series. What can you tell us about women's roles in the Viking culture?

A: Generally speaking, I don't think people know a great deal about the Viking culture, apart from the label that is usually attached to them, either pillagers or deviants who came and brought back loot to Norway. It was an incredibly sophisticated, complex and layered culture. They had their own laws, many of which protected women. Viking women were able to rule kingdoms, divorce husbands, own land, and Vikings were very progressive in terms of the rights of women.

Q: Why is storytelling important?

A: Going back to ancient cultures again, there was always a man in every village, they're usually called shamans. And these men, sometimes women, took on the hopes, ambitions, fears, and the dreams of the tribe, so that the tribe could look at where they have come from and where they were going. And these shamans were the first actors. I think that when we look at something that's well acted and a story that's well told, it allows us to be a mirror of who we are as human beings and as a culture, and offers a glimpse of where we're headed.

Q: Your 1997 autobiography, "Pictures in My Head" received rave reviews. Any plans for another book?

A: Yes. When I finish my current project, I intend to go back to writing. I've been working on bits and pieces here and there, and now I am going to seriously sit down and write this book. I really admire anybody who writes for a living. It requires such discipline, and I think you could only really do it if you loved it.

Q: You're often described as "brooding." What does that mean exactly?

A: I really don't know. Maybe people think I'm very serious or something. I suppose I tend to play intense kinds of roles, and I think people are always looking for labels.

Q: So what do you want to be when you grow up? No seriously, if you weren't an actor, you'd be...?

A: I used to be a teacher, so maybe I would go back to teaching. If not, I would love to be a film critic or an investigative journalist. There was a long time when I didn't enjoy acting so much. When I look back at my early days, when I was just entering the theatre, I was happy, carefree. And then I reached a stage when I got sort of tired, and I lost my enthusiasm for doing it, and I think that happens to quite a few people. But for some reason that I quite can't even explain, I feel like I've gotten my appetite back for it now, and I approach it with a different kind of excitement...I feel like I'm in a very good space in my life.

Q: What would people be surprised to learn about you?

A: That I'm not really a brooding, intense person, actually almost the opposite. — Reuters

Batman to lose son Robin

Posted: 27 Feb 2013 07:48 AM PST

February 27, 2013

DC Comics' Batman Incorporated: RIP Robin, April 2013. – DC ComicsNEW YORK, Feb 27 – Batman may be able to save the world, but he'll lose his sidekick Robin – who in his current incarnation is his son – in the upcoming Batman Incorporated comic book series.

DC Comics said the caped crusader's acrobatic young assistant, Batman alter ego Bruce Wayne's son Damian, will die in issue number eight.

"This master theme of damaged and ruined families was nowhere more in evidence than in the creation of Damian, the first 'Son of Batman' to be acknowledged in the canon," series writer Grant Morrison said in a statement.

"In many ways this has been Damian's story as much as it has been the story of Bruce Wayne and it's a story that had its end planned a long time ago – for what son could ever hope to replace a father like Batman, who never dies?"

The good news for those who might miss Robin is that this is the comics universe and characters who are killed can easily return. Even a previous incarnation of Robin was killed and resurrected before.

"You can never say never in a comic book," Morrison told the New York Post. "Batman will ultimately always have a partner." – AFP/Relaxnews

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