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SWEET GHOUL OF MINE »D3 D3
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Friday, October 24, 2014
ROBERT DOWNEY JR.
B S Z Los Angeles Times
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SHEDS THE SUPERHERO
HERE are worse descriptions, as actor typecasting goes, than “wisecracking superhero.” Then again, if you’re Robert Downey Jr. and colorful descriptions are what you trade in, it could start to feel a little bit limiting. The wheel turns quickly in Hollywood. What barely six years ago was talk of “Can Downey really pull off a superhero?” has slowly changed into “How much longer is Downey going to keep doing this superhero thing?” Four times out as Iron Man (with a fifth such tentpole, The Avengers: Age of Ultron, on the way in May) and a couple of superherolike Sherlock Holmes pictures, and that can start to happen. So an actor who’s morphed from wunderkind to cautionary tale to comeback story to (in some minds) a cliché, all seemingly before our eyes, is seeking a new phase, something less describable, though that doesn’t mean Downey won’t try. “The first [Iron Man] was heart, heart, heart,” he said. “Now the Tony Stark persona is eating itself. It hasn’t gotten away from me. But I realize I’m on the wheel.” The actor has a don’t-call-it-a-plan plan, an idea for another act, one in which he essentially aims to combine the freshness and intimacy of his early chapter with the clout and bankability of his recent one. Step one in that process is The Judge (currently in Philippine theaters from Warner Bros.—Ed.). The first movie to come from Team Downey—both a state of mind and, as a production company he founded with his wife Susan four years ago, a legal entity—The Judge is a throwback courtroom and family melodrama that tries to have it both ways, in a good way. It’s directed by a Hollywood comedy mainstay in David Dobkin (Wedding Crashers) and contains a big John Grisham-style hook— but is also, in the manner of a bona fide drama, driven by a father-son blood feud, interested in emo-soundtrack melancholy and full of intense moments with Robert Duvall. When Downey’s slick Chicago lawyer Hank returns to his small-town Indiana home upon the death of his mother, he finds himself in a complicated dance with his estranged dad, the titular judge (Duvall), who has been accused of murder and eventually reluctantly hires Hank to defend him. The Judge doesn’t entirely tone down Downey’s more gregarious, Tony Starkian instincts (your “hyper-verbal vocabulary vomit,” as the love interest played by Vera Farmiga says of his character in the film). But it doesn’t always use them as a crutch either. Susan Downey described the viewer experience of the film as “watching the Robert they think they know, who’s quick-witted and fast-talking and very smart, but he’s on an emotional journey where those tricks won’t work.” Or in the patois that could be called Downey-speak, he said, “I think what you can tell is if you feel like you’re hitting the same note you need to flex, and the funny thing is I would find myself weeping not really for my own catharsis because the effective story, A to Z, is laid out, and it ceases to be what it’s talking about, but how these themes and algorithms unfold for me.” Downey is restless on a couch at the Toronto International Film Festival—lying one way feet out; lying another, feet up—just hours before The Judge will open the annual prestige-cinema gathering. In that interview and another somewhat more relaxed phone conversation from his home in Los Angeles, the actor comes off as highly aware of his own image, the divisions it has caused fans, the restlessness it has stirred in him. In person he can seem both larger than life and child-like, especially given his enthusiasm. Farmiga describes it as “I love him like I love a puppy. He comes at you with a hundred ideas, bounds off you and lands in your lap. He’s a border collie.” He has a manner of speaking that can seem at once direct and circuitous. Downey is a rare beast, an actor who, thanks to a personality he deploys to unique effect on the screen, makes it harder than most for us to distinguish between public persona and private life. Susan Said: “He’s one of the most grounded people you’ll ever meet, and you’ll be able to have that conversation with him. And as soon as you feel that
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Forecast inflation for next year and in 2016 was also scaled down even lower to 3.7 percent from 3.8 percent, and to 2.8 percent from 3.0 percent, respectively. The moderating inflation outlook allowed the monetary authorities to pause and refrain from changing the current monetary settings for the second time this year and in this manner ensure the target growth, measured as the gross domestic product (GDP), is attained. “Latest forecasts show a lower inflation path for 2014 to 2016, reflecting easing pressures on
BusinessMirror
World B3-1 | Friday, October 24, 2014 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
Police converge on Parliament Hill in ottawa on Wednesday. A soldier standing guard at the National War Memorial was shot by a gunman and people reported hearing gunfire inside the halls of Parliament. AP/The CAnAdiAn Press, AdriAn Wyld
Canada’s PM: Shooting rampage was terrorism TTAWA, Ontario—A masked gunman killed a soldier standing guard at Canada’s war memorial on Wednesday, then stormed Parliament in an attack that was stopped cold when he was shot to death by the ceremonial sergeant-at-arms.
Canada’s prime minister called it the country’s second terrorist attack in three days. “We will not be intimidated. Canada will never be intimidated,” Prime Minister Stephen Harper vowed in an address to the nation. Unfolding just before 10 a.m., while lawmakers were meeting in caucus rooms, the assault rocked Parliament over and over with the boom of gunfire, led Members of Parliament to barricade doors with
chairs and sent people streaming from the building in fear. Harper was addressing a caucus when the attack began outside the door, but he safely escaped. Investigators offered little information about the gunman, identified as 32-year-old petty criminal Michael Zehaf-Bibeau. But Harper said: “In the days to come we will learn about the terrorist and any accomplices he may have had.”
A government official told the Associated Press (AP) that ZehafBibeau was a recent convert to Islam. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to discuss the case publicly. Canada was already on alert because of a deadly hit-and-run assault on Monday against two Canadian soldiers by a man Harper described as an “ISIL [Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant]-inspired terrorist.” ISIL has called for reprisals against Canada and other Western countries that have joined the US-led air campaign against the extremist group in Iraq and Syria. Witnesses said the soldier posted at the National War Memorial, identified as Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, was gunned down at point-blank range by a man carrying a rifle and dressed all in black, his face half-covered with a scarf. The gunman appeared to raise his arms in triumph, then entered Parliament, a few hundred yards away, where dozens of shots soon
rang out, according to witnesses. People fled the complex by scrambling down scaffolding erected for renovations, while others took cover inside as police with rifles and body armor took up positions outside and cordoned off the normally bustling streets around Parliament. On Twitter, Canada’s justice minister and other government officials credited 58-year-old sergeant-atarms Kevin Vickers with shooting the attacker just outside the MPs’ caucus rooms. Vickers serves a largely ceremonial role at the House of Commons, carrying a scepter and wearing rich green robes, white gloves and a tall imperial hat. At least three people were treated for minor injuries. In Washington, President Barack Obama condemned the shootings as “outrageous” and said: “We have to remain vigilant.” The US Embassy in Ottawa was locked down as a precaution, and security was tightened at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery just outside
Washington. The US military increased security on Wednesday at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery after fatal shootings at a Canadian war memorial and Parliament, even though the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Homeland Security Department said there was no specific threat against the US. “Obviously the situation there is tragic,” Obama said, adding, “we’re all shaken by it.” The White House said Obama spoke by telephone with Harper. The US has offered to help the US ally with its response, and Obama expressed the American people’s solidarity with Canada. In a statement, the FBI said it had reminded field offices and government partners to remain vigilant in light of recent calls for attacks against government personnel by what it described as terrorist groups and like-minded individuals. “We stand ready to assist our Canadian partners as they deal with
the ongoing situation in their capital,” it said. The agency and Homeland Security said there was no specific threat against this country. A US Capitol police spokesman said the force remained at a post-9/11 “heightened level of awareness,” but did not make any significant modifications as a result of the shootings in Canada. Harper vowed that the attacks will “lead us to strengthen our resolve and redouble our efforts” to keep the country safe and work with Canada’s allies to fight terrorists. Police said in the initial hours that as many as two other gunmen may have taken part in the attacks. But by late in the evening, the cordon around Parliament was lifted and police said there was no longer any threat to the public in the area. Court records that appear to be the gunman’s show that he had a long rap sheet, with a string of convictions for assault, robbery, drug and weapons offenses, and other crimes. AP
US to track everyone coming from Ebola nations Survey: Local support for HK protesters grows A
TLANTA—All travelers who come into the US from three Ebola-stricken West African nations will now be monitored for three weeks, the latest step by federal officials to keep the disease from spreading into the country. Starting on Monday, anyone traveling from Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone will have to report with health officials daily and take their temperature twice a day. The measure applies not only to visitors from those countries but also returning American aid workers, federal health employees and journalists. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced the new step on Wednesday. The virus has killed more than 4,800 people in West Africa, nearly all in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. CDC Director Tom Frieden said monitoring would provide an extra level of safety. Passengers already get screened and temperature checks before they leave West Africa and again when they arrive in the US. “We have to keep our guard up,” Frieden told reporters on a conference call. The Obama administration has resisted increasing pressure to turn away any visitors from the three countries at the center of the Ebola outbreak, especially after a Liberian visitor to Dallas came down with the
AMber Vinson at emory University Hospital in Atlanta. AP
AMericAN video journalist Ashoka Mukpo at an iron ore mining camp in bong county, liberia. AP
infectious disease days after he arrived and later died. Instead, passenger screening was put in place at five key US airports. That was tightened on Tuesday to funnel everyone coming from those countries through those airports so all are checked. The monitoring program will start in six states—New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, New Jersey and Georgia—the destination for the bulk of the travelers from the outbreak region. It will later extend to other states. Each passenger will be required to provide contact information for themselves, as well as a friend or relative. They will be instructed to check for a fever twice a day and
report their temperature and any symptoms to health officials daily for 21 days. How the checks are done—in person, by phone or Skype—will be decided by the states, Frieden said. If a traveler does not report in, public health officials can track them down. How far they can go to get them to cooperate is up to those officials, CDC officials said. They will also receive Check and Report Ebola kits. The kits include a thermometer and instructions on what to do if symptoms occur. Also included is a card to present to health care providers if they seek care. CDC already was telling its own employees and other health professionals returning from the outbreak
zone to monitor their temperature. Meanwhile, doctors no longer detect Ebola in a Texas nurse who flew to Ohio and back before she was diagnosed with the virus, her family said on Wednesday. Officials at Emory University Hospital and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention couldn’t detect Ebola in Amber Vinson as of Tuesday evening, her family said in a statement released through a media consultant. Doctors usually do two tests a day apart before saying they can’t detect the virus. It’s unclear how many tests Vinson has had. Vinson’s mother, Debra Berry, spoke to her Wednesday, and Vinson has been approved for transfer from isolation, the statement said. At the same time, an American video journalist, who recovered from Ebola at a Nebraska hospital, left the facility on Wednesday afternoon and is heading home to Rhode Island, a hospital spokesman said. Ashoka Mukpo, who contracted the virus while working in Liberia as a freelance cameraman for NBC and other media outlets, was released from the Nebraska Medical Center’s biocontainment unit around 9 a.m. He spent several hours meeting with staff members who treated him and left the hospital complex in the afternoon, spokesman Taylor Wilson said. AP
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UBLIC support for Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protesters has grown, particularly among younger people, a survey shows, underlining the difficulty for the government to resolve four weeks of demonstrations. A public opinion poll conducted from October 8 to 15 by the Chinese University of Hong Kong and released on Wednesday showed 37.8 percent of respondents support the Occupy movement, an increase from 31.3 percent in mid-September. “This is not surprising because the government has so mishandled the protest with police using tear gas and a sense that the government doesn’t represent Hong Kong,” said Michael Davis, a law professor at the University of Hong Kong. The results come after Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chunying said that public patience for the demonstrations, which have blocked buildings and roads and snarled traffic, is wearing thin. Student leaders have pledged to continue their street occupation after a first round of talks this week failed to address their demands for a freer election in 2017. The proportion of people surveyed opposing the movement fell to 35.5 percent from 46.3 percent,
according to the poll. Much of the movement’s support comes from the young, with 62.1 percent of respondents 15 years to 24 years of age backing the protests, compared with 28.4 percent of people in the 40 to 59 age bracket, according to the poll. In the September survey, 46.7 percent of those aged 15 to 24 supported the protests. “The purpose of the movement is to occupy with peace and nonviolence, and this will encourage support,” 18-year-old student leader Joshua Wong said in a telephone interview when asked for his response to the poll. Student leaders met with government officials led by Chief Secretary Carrie Lam in televised talks on October 21 that failed to produce a solution to the biggest challenge to Chinese sovereignty of Hong Kong since the end of colonial rule in 1997. The protesters are demanding that China reverse a decision to vet candidates for the city’s leadership election in 2017 through a nominating committee. While gaining support from young people, the protesters are facing opposition from truck and cab drivers, as the roadblocks at the three protest sites have disrupted as much as 40 percent of bus routes and affected daily takings. Bloomberg
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series tied GIANTS SLAIN LIKE GOLIATH K
Sports BusinessMirror
ANSAS CITY, Missouri—Giants Manager Bruce Bochy signaled to his bullpen and got no relief. Over and over. While the Kansas City Royals showed off their late-inning heat, San Francisco’s relievers melted down. Given a sixth-inning tie to preserve, Jean Machi allowed Billy Butler’s go-ahead single. Rookie Hunter Strickland then yielded Salvador Perez’s tworun double and Omar Infante’s two-run homer in the Giants’ 7-2 loss to Kansas City on Wednesday night, which tied the World Series at one game apiece. “Those are the matchups that we were trying to get,” Bochy said. “It just didn’t work out. It was a tough inning for us. The bullpen had a hard time.” The lasting image of the night for the Giants was of Strickland shouting and getting into a confrontation with Perez, then being removed from the game. “I was just frustrated with myself. I let the team down,” said Strickland, who has allowed five postseason homers after giving up three during the regular season—all at Double-A. “My emotions got to me.” San Francisco’s bullpen had the fifth-best ERA in the majors during the regular season at 3.01, while Kansas City was 10th at 3.30. And while Santiago Casilla, Jeremy Affeldt, Javier Lopez and Sergio Romo are among the seven players who have played in all three of the Giants’ postseason runs since 2010, there have
been signs of unsteadiness. Jake Peavy had retired 10 in a row before Lorenzo Cain’s soft single to center leading off the sixth. Peavy walked Eric Hosmer before Machi came in, fell behind Butler 2-0 and allowed a go-ahead single to left. Lopez retired Alex Gordon on a flyout, and Bochy brought in Strickland, who gave up Bryce Harper’s third-deck home run in the NL Division Series opener at Washington and a splash shot to Harper that landed between kayaks in McCovey Cove during Game Four. Harper shouted at Strickland that afternoon. This time, the pitcher did the yelling. He threw a wild pitch that advanced the runners to second and third, then followed with a 97-mph fastball that Perez sent to the wall in left-center on three hops. Two pitches later, Infante turned on a 98 mph fastball that ran back over the plate, and Perez deposited it into the left-field bullpen. Strickland shouted at himself, which caught Perez’s attention and caused him to shout back. “I’m not going to back down from anything,” Strickland said, explaining why he in turn screamed at Perez. The benches emptied. No punches were thrown. Strickland was replaced by Jeremy Affeldt, making the Giants the third team to use five pitchers in a Series inning after a pair of teams in Game Sevens, Baltimore in 1979 and Saint Louis in 1985. “I think it was just frustration on his part,” Bochy
said. “It’s intense out there. He’s an intense kid, and it probably got away from him a little bit.... It’s a big stage. A lot of emotions are going to be shown in these games, and the kid was frustrated. He’ll be back out there.” By that time, the game had gotten away from San Francisco, along with the chance to become the first World Series team since the 1999 New York Yankees to open with a pair of road wins. Tim Lincecum—remember him?—got in the game in the seventh and left with tightness in his left lower back while pitching to Perez with two outs in the eighth. The two-time NL Cy Young Award winner was demoted to the bullpen in August because of ineffectiveness and hadn’t pitched since the regular-season finale on September 28. “We’re just going to treat it, see how it feels tomorrow,” Lincecum said. “But right now it feels pretty stiff.” Unlike two years ago against Detroit, the Giants won’t sweep. Now the Series is even as San Francisco returns home for the weekend. “We knew coming in,” Michael Morse said, “it wasn’t going to be easy.” AP Giants’ (from left) Buster Posey, Brandon Belt »andTHEHunter Pence watch helplessly from the dugout
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KANSAS City Royals’ Alcides Escobar (2), Jarrod Dyson, Omar Infante and Lorenzo Cain (6) celebrate their Game Two victory. AP
By Dave Skretta The Associated Press
ANSAS CITY, Missouri—Salvador Perez shouted at Hunter Strickland, who shouted right back. The Kansas City Royals streamed from their dugout, the San Francisco Giants from their own. And for a tense moment in the sixth inning on Wednesday night, Kauffman Stadium was consumed by chaos. The one thing that was clear? The World Series suddenly had some life. Perez broke open Game Two with a two-run double in a five-run sixth, and the Royals’ cast of clutch relievers kept the Giants in check for a 7-2 victory that leveled the Series and spiced things up as it shifts to San Francisco for three games. “We showed them that we have fight in us, and I think they knew that already,” said Billy Butler, whose RBI single in the sixth inning gave the Royals a 3-2 lead. “But we stepped up big there as a team, and that gave us some confidence.” Jeremy Guthrie will be on the mound on Friday night for the Royals, who had won eight straight playoff games before a 7-1 loss in the opener. Tim Hudson will start for San Francisco. “With their pitching and our pitching, and the way both teams play, we’re going
to have a fight, I think, every game,” Giants Manager Bruce Bochy said. So much talk of fighting after the two teams nearly came to blows on Wednesday. The Royals had surged ahead on Butler’s single when Perez followed with a double off Strickland into the leftfield gap. Omar Infante then scorched a pitch into the bullpen in left, the fifth homer that Strickland had allowed to 23 postseason batters. Boiling over with anger, Strickland yelled into his glove then got into a shouting match with Perez as the big, burly catcher headed for home. Players spilled out of both dugouts, and several Royals streamed in from the outfield bullpen before the umpires finally restored order. “He started to look at me, so I asked him like, ‘Hey, why you look at me?’” Perez said. “So he was telling me, ‘Get out of here, whatever.’ So I don’t know. ‘You don’t have to treat me like that. Look at Omar. Omar hit a bomb. I didn’t hit a bomb. I hit a double.’” Strickland said he simply let his frustration get to him. “I let the team down,” he said. “My emotions got to me.” With his 100 mph fastball singeing the Giants’ batters, Royals flamethrower Yordano Ventura allowed two runs while pitching into the sixth inning. The 23-yearold protege of Pedro Martinez hardly
looked like the first rookie to make a World Series start for the Royals, calmly handling a lineup that had ravaged staff ace James Shields. The dynamic trio of Kelvin Herrera, Wade Davis and Greg Holland did the rest. Herrera got the final two outs of the sixth to escape a jam, his first three pitches clocking at least 100 mph. He also survived a shaky seventh before Davis breezed through the eighth. Greg Holland, who saved each game in the Royals’ sweep of Baltimore in the AL Championship Series, allowed a twoout single to Brandon Crawford before fanning Gregor Blanco to end the game. The Giants’ only runs came on a homer by Blanco and a double by Brandon Belt, their streak of seven straight World Series wins ending on a crisp, breezy night. “For us to leave here with a split, you like to get greedy,” Bochy said, “but we know it’s going to be a tough series.” Early on, it looked as if the Giants could have a big lead heading back to the Bay Area. The fleet-footed Blanco silenced a rollicking sea of blue, becoming the 10th player to open a World Series game with a home run. He deposited Ventura’s 98-mph fastball in the bullpen in right field, just his 17th home run in more than 2,300 at-bats. The crowd, energized from the
moment that Hall of Famer George Brett delivered the ceremonial first pitch, was left waiting for something good to happen for the second straight night. This time, the scrappy Royals gave it to them. ALCS MVP Lorenzo Cain stretched a two-out double later in the first, and Eric Hosmer walked on four pitches. Butler, Giants starter Jake Peavy’s longtime nemesis, then bounced a single past the outstretched glove of Crawford at shortstop to knot the game 1-all. The Royals kept the pressure on in second. Infante doubled over the head of Travis Ishikawa in left field, and Escobar sliced a two-out double down the rightfield line to give Kansas City a 2-1 lead, its first in the World Series since Game Seven in 1985. The Giants, so accustomed to October baseball, refused to back down. Belt tied it in the fourth with a double that bounced off Nori Aoki’s glove in right field. The game was still knotted at 2 when the Royals got their first two batters aboard in the sixth. Bochy pulled the fiery Peavy. Butler promptly hit a go-ahead single off Jean Machi, and Strickland came in two batters later. From there, well, the Royals showed they still had plenty of fight left.
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GROWTH THROUGH INFRA SPENDING Public Works Secretary Rogelio L. Singson (left) answers questions on the topic “Driving Growth through Infrastructure Spending” during the Philippine Investment Conference: Sustaining the Economic Growth Momentum held in Makati City. Also in the photo are panelists Finance Undersecretary Jose Emmanuel Reverente (center) and Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Deputy Governor for the Monetary Stability Sector Diwa C. Guinigundo. Alysa Salen
Avid sales up 37% ASIA NEEDS TO COORDINATE on sustained strong POLICIES AS GROWTH SLOWS PC, LCV demand A
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during the seventh inning of Game Two. AP
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commodity prices,” BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco Jr. said. Tetangco said the risks to the inflation outlook are now “broadly balanced” and compares more favorably against an earlier assessment in which the risk to inflation was “skewed toward the upside.” He said potential price pressures coming from pending petitions for adjustments in utility rates and possible price shortages will be mitigated by the uneven growth of those countries to which the Philippines has significant trade and investment relations, such as the United See “BSP,” A8
By Catherine N. Pillas
| Friday, OCtOber 24, 2014 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
The Royals’ cast of clutch relievers keeps the Giants in check for a 7-2 victory to level the World Series and spice things up as the duel shifts to San Francisco for three games.
By Bianca Cuaresma
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SHOOTING RAMPAGE WAS TERRORISM
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P25.00 nationwide | 7 sections 32 pages | 7 days a week
nflation was seen moderating over the next 18 to 24 months—enough to warrant a scaledown in forecast inflation to only 4.4 percent this year from 4.5 percent when this was first projected in September—the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said on Thursday.
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way, he’ll go on a tangent you’ll have no ability to follow.” She laughed. “I think he’s wired differently than a lot of us, and as much as he makes attempts every day to be a linear thinker, it’s really not his default setting”. She added, “It’s really exciting for everyone else, but I think it can sometimes be exhausting for him.” (Of Susan Downey, pregnant with the couple’s second child and his guide and producer in more tangible Hollywood ways, Robert Downey said, “My wife points true north. People think she’s Spock with [breasts], and what she presents to the world is a very structured personality, but she’s this highly intuitive, creative person.”) In fact, Susan pushed The Judge in the midst of all the Iron Man madness several years ago—Dobkin had devised the idea after the death of his mother and thought Downey would be the perfect man to play a sharpie brought low—even as the actor told his wife that he didn’t want to reprise a legal role after doing that in True Believer and Ally McBeal. She persisted, and eventually persuaded him. With its swings between heavy-lidded drama and glib comedy, The Judge has a schizophrenic quality that has polarized some viewers. That took particular shape in a bathroom scene that was maligned by some at Toronto. In the scene, breaking from some of the Downey-like one-liners that came not long before, Hank and Duvall’s judge, who is suffering from a terminal illness, have at it emotionally. The scene ends when Hank holds his father as the latter loses control of his bodily functions. Perhaps because he produced and helped shape the movie, or perhaps because he’s simply invested in this career phase in a different way these days, Downey offers an impassioned defense of the scene. “It’s meant to be disquieting, not graphic; the judge is meant to be completely exposed in that moment,” he said. “Someone you have a hot, contested relationship and can plunge the dagger in, and in the midst of that moment something like that happens. I can tell you, something like that has happened a half-dozen times in my life and no matter how much friction you have with someone, if they’re metaphorically bleeding you tend to them.” As an old-school piece, The Judge stands in sharp contrast to the slick entertainment of modern Hollywood, and you can imagine someone who wants to get a away from that kind of moviemaking while at the same time not descending into preciousness (“Beware the passion project,” Downey said, making a cross with his fingers) choosing exactly this kind of zeitgeist denial. Downey has, indeed, gone against Tony Stark and Sherlock Holmes type with this film—not by returning to the hard-boiled Less Than Zero or the quiet charms of Chaplin of his early career but by heading to a time when tentpole entertainment was about emotional fireworks, not whiz-bang effects. Downey calls the film “a really nice, long intermission between outright capitalism.” So can he do it? Can Downey play someone different from who he’s been, when his private skills and public personality are so bound up with one another, when his Downey-ness is so embedded in our culture? He and Susan believe he can. Even as Team Downey develops Sherlock Holmes 3, there’s a project about the World War II naval carrier the Indianapolis and a new take on Pinocchio in the works, and other movies that Downey could produce or act in or even write, as well as several TV dramas the company is developing. Downey talks of himself as “coming from a world of off-Broadway that closes after one night.” He described a meeting with Robert Redford recently in which Redford talked about suffering on an independent film. “And my reaction was, ‘I want that.’” “He has a unique vision and I think we’ve only scratched the surface of it,” Susan Downey said of her husband. Or as it sounds in Downey-speak: “It’s interesting. There’s an opportunity in placing your worth just slightly out of your own skin, and wanting to prolong a projection of what you represent in an industry instead of saying, ‘This too shall pass.’ But my biological clock is running the show. I’m turning 50 next year, and maybe there’s a few more in me. [But] time is the only nonnegotiable integer.” Then he takes a pause to go linear. “I think it would be a shame if I squandered whatever opportunity has arisen by just playing it safe.” ■
Friday, October 24, 2014 Vol. 10 No. 16
2014-2016 inflation forecast cut
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MONETARY SETTINGS KEPT AS B.S.P. SEES PRICE PRESSURES EASING
INSIDE
EAR Lord, it is now my 11th day vacationing at Small Mountain Road, Wapwallopen, Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania. I am staying with my best friend in college UST way back in 1965. Our deep spirituality set our dedication to give our all at work. In 1969 she left for the US. I was in La Salle Green Hills as a teacher. We both made names in our profession as truly dedicated professionals working for the glory of God. More than four decades, we surpassed many trials in life. We remain loyal to the Father and He gave us our families experiencing love, peace, hope and unity to this day. My prayers will lead me to where God wants after my vacation. Amen.
A broader look at today’s business
ales of vehicle importers and distributors surged by 37 percent in September, credited to the strong demand for both passenger cars (PC) and light commercial vehicles (LCV). The Association of Vehicle Importers and Distributors (Avid), in a statement released on Thursday, said the group’s members collectively sold 3,043 units in September from only 2,227 units sold in the same month last year. Avid said PC sales increased by 38 percent to 1,703 units against the year-ago figure of 1,230 units. September’s haul brought total PC sales in the first See “Avid,” A2
PESO exchange rates n US 44.7790
sia-Pacific economies need to recalibrate financial policies in the face of slowing global growth, United States Deputy Treasury Secretary Sarah Bloom Raskin said on Wednesday, following a meeting of regional financial officials to prepare for next month’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum. Countries in the region are looking to boost financing for the construction of roads, bridges and other necessary infrastructure and will submit proposals to do so to the summit, which will be in Beijing. Figures showing lower Chinese growth announced this week have raised concerns about negative effects on the global economy and highlighted the need for coordinated action. “Global demand is slowing and it is going to be something that we as a group of countries are going to need to pay particular attention to,” Raskin said at a Continued on A8
Govt to bid out over 10 PPPs in next 12 months By Cai U. Ordinario
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he government may start the bidding process for more than 10 public-private partnership (PPP) projects in the next 12 months, according to PPP Center Executive Director Cosette V. Canilao. The PPP deals to be bid out, Canilao said, include major rail and transportation projects to be undertaken by the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) and major road projects of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH). “We do now have a very robust
CANILAO: “We do now have a very robust pipeline and, out of that pipeline, we’ve identified several projects that we intend to rollout in the next 12 months.”
pipeline and, out of that pipeline, we’ve identified several projects that we intend to roll out in the next 12 months. Included there are major See “PPPs,” A8
n japan 0.4180 n UK 71.8658 n HK 5.7729 n CHINA 7.3186 n singapore 35.1898 n australia 39.4459 n EU 56.6186 n SAUDI arabia 11.9366 Source: BSP (23 October 2014)