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luke evans sinks teeth into latest legendary character D
EAR God, we read, study and meditate Your word in the Bible. It is the core of our work in the New Evangelization. We read the Bible to help us grow in holiness and discipleship. We commit ourselves to live the word in thoughts, words and actions. We try to focus on the methodology of liturgical Bible Study. By the help of the Holy Spirit we can claim the Good News of salvation in Christ and may the New Evangelization lead us to the greatest height of knowing, serving and loving God all our life. Amen. LITURGICAL BIBLE STUDY, FRANK P. AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
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LEA SALONGA D4 BY WAY OF LIGAYA
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Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
LUKE EVANS SINKS TEETH
Friday, October 17, 2014
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INTO LATEST LEGENDARY CHARACTER B G M Los Angeles Times
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ELFAST, Northern Ireland— Welsh actor Luke Evans has a penchant for larger-than-life characters. He’s twice played Greek gods—Apollo in Clash of the Titans, Zeus in Immortals—and he’s portrayed literary icons—Aramis in the most recent big-screen adaptation of The Three Musketeers, and the brave human Bard the Bowman in the Hobbit movies. For his first real leading-man turn in a Hollywood epic, he’s revisiting legends and literature in a new way, tackling his biggest character yet. In Dracula Untold, he plays Vlad Tepes, the fearsome Eastern European warrior known for impaling his enemies. The character famously served as a key inspiration for Bram Stoker’s aristocratic vampire, but the big-budget Universal Pictures film that is now in theaters transports Dracula from Victorian England to the 15th century and sets out to present a more complex portrait of the bloodthirsty prince. “We’re almost turning the monster on its head in a way and allowing people to see Dracula in a different light,” Evans said on the Belfast set of the film last year. “When you think of the word ‘Dracula,’ you think of this pale-faced, fanged man floating through an ancient house on top of a mountain. We are trying to slightly pull away from that and give it that punch of reality.” Directed by first-time feature filmmaker Gary Shore and written by Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless, Dracula Untold opens in 1462 Transylvania: Prince Vlad is a respected ruler, a doting husband and father to a young son. But the peace is threatened when the neighboring Turks, led by the sultan Mehmed (Dominic Cooper), demand that Vlad surrender 1,000 boys to serve in their army. After the Turks reject Vlad’s offer to fight in the place of the inexperienced children, he travels to Broken Tooth Mountain, a haunted site shrouded in red mist. What he encounters there robs him of his humanity, and he is forced to wrestle with new, dark urges while simultaneously protecting his people using surprising and unexpected powers. “He has to keep it to himself for a majority of the film that he’s battling this awful sort of addiction, but he knows this addiction comes with a positive side—which is this power and strength that he’s able to [use to combat] the Turks’ invasion of his country,” Evans said. Dracula, as a character, has captivated filmmakers since the dawn of cinema. Stoker’s book was first adapted by F.W. Murnau in 1922 as Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens, and roughly two dozen movie actors have interpreted the role in various productions, though it’s typically Bela Lugosi, Christopher Lee and Gary Oldman who are most associated
with the immortal caped fiend. (Evans cites a particular fondness for Oldman’s performance in Francis Ford Coppola’s 1992 telling.) For his Dracula, Evans was pleased to deviate from the usual script and dive into historical research about Vlad Tepes—and he was excited to bring more personality to a legendary figure remembered almost exclusively for sadism on the battlefield. “There’s lots of contrasting stories about how dark he was, how vicious he was, how bloodthirsty he was,” Evans said. “But then in the same breath, you hear about how great a leader he was and how loved by his people he was and respected by his enemies he was. Even on his tombstone in Romania, it says he was respected by his enemies.... “When you take those things into account, you think, ‘Well, as much as he’s remembered for impaling thousands of people on poles in a field, there was much more to the man.’” His studious approach was born out of his work in the theater. Evans, 35, began acting professionally on the London stage and had worked successfully for about a decade before landing his first studio feature, the remake of Clash of the Titans, which, in turn, led to other outsized parts in subsequent Hollywood productions. Director Peter Jackson said he cast Evans in The Hobbit films based not only on his previous performances but also in part on his winning personality: He described Evans as the kind of guy you could grab a drink with at a pub. “No one else would step in and play Bard the way Luke has, which is terrific when an actor really owns a role like that,” Jackson said, speaking by phone from New Zealand. “He’s a dream actor to work with,” Shore added. “He’s the most committed person I’ve ever worked with. He’s a brilliant team player, and he’s been a great comrade to me. He’s someone who can always collaborate.” Although he never set out to forge a career based on action-packed blockbusters, Evans said he’s comfortable with the path he’s found himself traveling (though he did recently wrap Ben Wheatley’s indie thriller High-Rise, due out next year). It seems fantastic cinema affords far more unusual opportunities than kitchen-sink dramas ever could. With Dracula Untold, for example, Evans shot transporting scenes not only on grandiose palace sets but also in such startling natural locations as Giant’s Causeway, a series of dramatic cliffs on the northeast coast of Northern Ireland. “When they say, ‘Action!’ I’m in 1483, and I love that idea—it’s like time travel for 10 minutes,” Evans said. “You can’t draw on anything that you have in your normal life. You can be on top of a mountain and kill 15 Turks and then jump on the back of a horse and gallop down a highway. That’s what I did a couple of weeks ago.” ■
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recognizing outstanding citizens and lgus BusinessMirror
Friday, October 17, 2014 F1
SECOND‘BUSINESSMIRROR’DANGAL AWARDS
Recognizing outstanding elderly citizens and LGUs U
OUTSTANDING ELDERLY CITIZENS
By Janica Monick Riego and Roderick Abad
THE BusinessMirror, in partnership with the United Bayanihan Foundation, RiteMed and CDOFoodsphere, holds its Second Dangal (Dakilang Adhikain ng Ating Lahi) Awards for Elderly Care in recognition of the noble effort of the elderly who still choose to serve, despite their age, by making the lives of our seniorcitizen community easier through different initiatives. The awarding ceremony will be held on October 17 at the Genting Club in Resorts World Manila, coinciding with the BusinessMirror’s celebration of its ninth anniversary.
PON retirement, many people would usually choose to leisurely spend their time and do things they could not do during their working years, such as going on long vacations, do gardening and quilting, and playing with their grandchildren. Some, however, choose to continue serving others even in their senior years. These people never seem to tire of making the world a better place, even at an age when they are supposed to be resting at the comforts
of their own homes. Some would take responsibility in taking care of their grandchildren, while others join the associations of elderly citizens in their barangays and help implement programs of their local government units (LGUs).
RICARDO A. CARPIO
AT the age of 83, Ricardo “Carding” A. Carpio of San Mateo, Rizal, could not have done more for his fellow elderly citizens as he already has served them for almost two decades. Cliché Continued on F2
Friday, October 17, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 9
P25.00 nationwide | 8 sections 36 pages | 7 days a week
By Catherine N. Pillas
he Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines Inc. (Campi) sees the possibility of hitting the 300,000-unit sales mark as early as next year, given the current growth rate of the industry.
Campi President Rommel Gutierrez said if the industry can sell more than 260,000 units this year, they would likely make a “bolder projection” for 2015— 300,000 units. “We have yet to see the realization of the 250,000unit revised projection so, I think, if we achieve that, we will be more confident in making a bolder projection. If we can hit 260,000 this year, that 300,000 is possible for next year,” Gutierrez told reporters on Wednesday evening.
2nd BusinessMirror Dangal Awards news@businessmirror.com.ph
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Campi’s sanguine outlook: 300,000 units sold in 2015
INSIDE
Live the word
A broader look at today’s business
RICARDO CARPIO (left) and Rodrigo Evano
See “Campi,” A2
elderly supplement
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unhealthy sponsorship
By Lorenz S. Marasigan
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Sports BusinessMirror
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| Friday, OCtOber 17, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
MOTORCYCLE AND SURF BOARD Moto2 rider Anthony West of Australia falls off a surfboard during a surf lesson ahead of the Australian Motorcycle Grand Prix near Melbourne on Thursday. AP
UNHEALTHY
SPONSORSHIP Companies promoting unhealthy food and drink are the most prevalent, sponsoring nearly 50 percent of Australia’s main sporting groups, followed by alcohol and gambling companies.
By Dennis Passa
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The Associated Press
RISBANE, Australia—The biggest and most influential sporting groups in Australia are being criticized for signing “unhealthy” and high-profile sponsorship deals with beer and liquor companies, gambling agencies and fastfood chains. A study by the University of Sydney’s School of Public Health reveals nearly threequarters of national and state governmentfunded sporting bodies are sponsored by companies promoting “harmful” products. In a sports-mad country, that’s not the best of news. Companies promoting unhealthy food and drink were the most prevalent, sponsoring nearly 50 percent of Australia’s main sporting groups, followed by alcohol and gambling companies. “Our research revealed a pervasive level of unhealthy sponsorship across our sporting codes,” study researcher Rona Macniven said. “Associating these harmful products with positive aspects of sport normalizes associated activities.” The findings of the study were released a day after A-League football’s Western Sydney Wanderers were criticized over a sponsorship deal with a fast-food company, which will see a meal named after the club served in dozens of
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PPRENTICE jockey Caitlin Forrest died on Wednesday after a fall at Murray Bridge race course near Adelaide, the second female jockey to die this week in Australia. Forrest’s mount Colla Voce fell, bringing down three other horses, and she was flung to the ground ahead of
locations in the western Sydney region. The “Wanderers Meal” will include chicken nuggets, a large hamburger, large french fries and a large sugary drink. Food experts said the meal accounts for 70 percent to 75 percent of an average person’s recommended daily calorie intake, and twice the amount of salt. The critics said a 10-year-old child would have to play football or another similarly active sport for 10 hours to burn off the calories from that meal. Despite an international reputation for its sporting success and outdoor lifestyle, Australia has experienced a surge in the rate of obesity. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare reports that three in five adults in Australia are overweight or obese, and the overall number of obese or overweight people has increased by 5 percent since 1995. The institute said one in four Australian children were overweight or obese. Macniven said the University of Sydney-funded study into sports sponsorship used a set of criteria developed by 12 health experts from government and non-governmental organizations to determine what constituted an unhealthy food or drink. “It included representatives from the cancer council and heart foundation who were looking at the main nutritional content of the foods that were prominently produced by the company,” Macniven said in a telephone interview Thursday with the Associated Press (AP). “In some cases, the companies involved
the trailing pack. Forrest, 19, was airlifted to Royal Adelaide Hospital but died from her injuries. Carly-Mae Pye, 26, died on Tuesday from injuries sustained when the horse she was riding broke its front legs during a training run, throwing her headfirst into the track. Pye was riding on Monday in a jump-out, which simulates the start of a race in barriers in non-race conditions, at
did produce healthy mineral water, but their main product streams were unhealthy.” Macniven said there were 14 mainstream Australian sports groups which had no unhealthy sponsorship tie-ins, including cycling, swimming and triathlon. Cricket Australia, which features a large beer company logo on the shirts of its limited-overs international team, was considered by the study to be the worst offender. A check of major Australian sports web sites backs up the study. Cricket Australia’s web site has a prominent beer company logo as one of its “platinum” sponsors, while smaller logos of companies representing a gambling agency, fastfood fried chicken and sugary drinks also appear. The fast-food fried chicken company is the major naming-rights sponsor for the domestic Twenty20 cricket league. Cricket Australia (CA) said in an e-mailed statement to the AP that its commercial sponsors “provide critical financial support for the game at all levels, from the grassroots to elite competition.” It defended its association with an alcohol sponsors by saying it has a responsible drinking campaign called “Know When to Declare.” “Our research shows that it is better to engage with the reality that most fans enjoy a responsible drink than it is to turn them off with a prohibition message that they don’t believe,” CA said in its statement. “We believe
that this is a pragmatic approach.” It also said its fast-food sponsor helped spread the game to a wider range of the Australian public, and said Cricket Australia has a range of programs in place to encourage children “to get off the couch and be active, from school education resources through to the development of our Milo in2CRICKET participation program.” The National Rugby League has logos from companies, which manufacture beer, bourbon, soft drinks and the fast-food fried chicken company on its web,site, and the Australian Football League has beer and a soft drink company featured in its online marketing. The A-League is sponsored by a car company and has none of the so-called unhealthy sponsors on its web site. But that
was counteracted when one of its 10 teams aligned itself with the fast-food burger chain that is packaging the Wanderers Meal. “I despair at the way some sports seem willing to sell themselves to anyone, and to promote unhealthy messages, regardless of the consequences,” Mike Daube, professor of health policy at the Curtin University in Perth, Australia, told Fairfax Media. “This is rampant promotion for the obesity epidemic.” Macniven sounded exasperated at the thought of the Wanderers Meal. “Sports is supposed to be linked with health, but here we have unhealthy options under the guise of health,” she told the AP. “Children, of course, are heavily influenced by this kind of material in a negative way.”
JUAN SAEZ rides Lady ZuZu at Keeneland in Lexington, Kentucky, in an October 9 race. AP
Callaghan Park at Rockhampton in Queensland state. A 17-year-old apprentice jockey from Panama, Juan Saez, also died in a race fall at a track in the US state of Indiana on Wednesday. The Jockeys’ Guild said on Wednesday that Saez died on Tuesday night at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis, where the Panamanian was airlifted after the accident at Indiana
Grand Racing & Casino. Saez was aboard Montezuma Express when his mount clipped heels with the horse in front of him, Paddy’s Note. Saez’s mount fell, causing him to be unseated. A trailing horse, Masaru ridden by Ricardo Santana Jr., was unable to avoid Saez’s horse and also fell, unseating Santana Jr., who wasn’t seriously injured. Saez began his US career in
June, winning the riding title at Ellis Park, Kentucky with 51 wins from 194 starts. Australian Racing Board Chief Executive Peter McGauran said on Thursday that authorities will continue to research improved safety equipment, but that racing has become safer in recent years, despite the two deaths this week.
DOTC confident of effecting MRT buyout in January
“Tracks have never been safer with plastic running rails...but we still have catastrophic injuries and losses of life,” McGauran told a Sydney radio station. “Safety equipment is better than it has ever been but with 500 [kilogram] to 600 kilogram [approximately 1,100 pounds to 1,300 pounds] horses going that fast, the jockeys are always at risk.” AP
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he Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) will welcome 2015 with the implementation of the buyout of the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) Line 3, a Cabinet official revealed. Transportation Secretary Joseph Emilio A. Abaya said the government is gearing up for the implementation of the planned buyout, as the House of Representatives infused the P54-billion budget for the takeover into the agency’s P595-billion 2015 allocation. “The controlling factor would be the budget. What is critical is the 2015 budget, because the P54 billion is earmarked for 2015. If the budget is passed, we could expect the takeover to roll in the first week of January,” he said in a chance interview. But to effect the buyout, the government and MRT Corp. (MRTC), the private concessionaire of the train system, must enter into a compromise agreement first. Continued on A2
PESO exchange rates n US 44.8690
CNN-NINE MEDIA PARTNERSHIP Nine Media Corp. Chairman Ambassador Antonio L. Cabangon Chua (third from left) leads a toast with (from left) Nine Media Corp. President Reggie Galura, CNN Global Content and Partnerships Senior Vice President Greg Beitchman, and Communications Secretary Herminio B. Coloma Jr. during the trade launch of CNN Philippines at the Philippine International Convention Center in Pasay City on Wednesday night. ALYSA SALEN
AUDI MOTORCARS RESPONDS TO LEMON LAW COMPLAINT
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n light of a recent complaint filed by retired Air Force Col. Ricardo L. Nolasco regarding an allegedly defective Audi A6 TDI he purchased on May 30, 2014, Audi Motorcars emphasized that Republic Act 10642—otherwise known as “The Philippine Lemon Law”—is completely not applicable in this case. “In the first place, the car is not defective; the Lemon Law protects consumers against ‘lemons’, or substandard cars. The vehicle is most assuredly not a lemon,” stressed Lito Jose, sales and marketing director of Audi Motorcars Inc. “Audi is one of the leading and most respected luxury automotive brands in the world, and we make sure to uphold this proud heritage in the Philippines.” It was confirmed that the Audi A6 TDI was given full clearance to be released on September 2, 2014, after passing comprehensive diagnostic testing, but the owner has thus declined See “Audi,” A2
China’s reserves dropped below $4-T mark in Q3
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hina’s foreign-exchange reserves unexpectedly fell by the most on record in the third quarter, a sign speculative capital is being pulled from the country amid concern about a deepening economic slowdown. The holdings, which are more than triple the size of any other nation’s, declined by $103 billion to $3.89 trillion, according to figures released on Thursday. The median projection of economists surveyed by Bloomberg was for an increase to $4.01 trillion from $3.99 trillion, after a $172-billion advance in the first half of the year. Reports last month showed China’s imports unexpect-
edly contracted in August, while aggregate financing and industrial production fell short of estimates. “Today’s data show some hotmoney outflows as people were concerned about the economy with the not-so-great data for August,” said Nathan Chow, Hong Kong-based economist at DBS Group Holdings Ltd. “This isn’t necessarily bad news for China, as the government prefers more two-way flows of capital.” The People’s Bank of China engineered a decline in the yuan in the January-to-April period to deter speculation that the currency was a one-way appreciation bet, following Continued on A8
n japan 0.4238 n UK 71.8846 n HK 5.7844 n CHINA 7.3245 n singapore 35.2910 n australia 39.4591 n EU 57.6387 n SAUDI arabia 11.9619 Source: BSP (16 October 2014)