I N T E R N A T I O N A L
I N T E R N A T I O N A L
16 Pages Number 244 6th year
Price: Rp 3.000,-
Entertainment
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Nicole Kidman admits ‘toughest year’ after father’s death
WEATHER FORECAST 23 - 32 Dps
e-mail: info_ibp@balipost.co.id online: http://www.internationalbalipost.com. http://epaper.internationalbalipost.com.
Wednesday, December 10, 2014 German court throws out Nazi massacre case
Page 6
Man United beats Southampton 2-1 in Premier League
Ukraine attempts new cease-fire in the east
Page 13
Page 8
Agence France-Presse
SYDNEY - Australian film star Nicole Kidman has described 2014 as her toughest ever year, saying the sudden death of her father in Singapore had left her family in “so much pain”.
AP Photo/Polydor
This photo provi ded by Polydor shows the album cover for “III,” by Take That.
Take That back as a trio on ‘III’ Associated Press
LONDON - What to make of Take That? The 1990s boy band was adored by a generation in its native Britain. When Take That returned in 2005 as a grown-up “man band,” fans embraced the group as if it had never been away. “III” is the band’s sixth No. 1 studio album in the U.K., its title a reference to Take That’s new status as a trio, with the departure earlier this year of Jason Orange. The group earlier survived the loss of original member Robbie Williams, but how much attrition can its chemistry bear? Well, a three-wheeled car is still a car, and Take That is like a luxury automobile — a Jaguar, perhaps — humming along with neither surprises nor disappointments. Gary Barlow, Mark Owen and Howard Donald still sound vocally at ease in each other’s company. The album’s opener and lead single, “These Days,” is a welltooled construction of tight vocal harmonies and up-tempo electro-beats. It’s easy to imagine it filling dance floors, while “Get Ready” is an equally effective pop anthem. The rest of the album, created with producers including Gary Kurstin and Stuart Price, is similarly polished, though musically unadventurous and lyrically bland. “III” is at its most interesting when it swerves a bit, as with the grungy electro buzz of “I Like It” or the low-key, McCartneyesque charm of “Amazing” — a word only true fans will apply to this album.
In Sydney for the premiere of her new movie “Paddington”, the Oscar winner said her close-knit family were “hunkering down for Christmas” without her father Antony Kidman. “You know, I will look back at this year as one of the toughest years our family’s ever gone through -- I mean, the toughest ever,” she told Sydney’s Daily Telegraph Monday. Antony Kidman, a doctor, died in Singapore in September from a heart attack as he was visiting daughter Antonia and her family. “I talk about it because I like to keep him alive, in a way,” his famous older daughter said. “Even though you talk about it, you’re still in so much pain so, yeah, as a family we’re still in a lot of pain. “As any family knows when you’ve had a huge loss, it makes you tighter, you have to also protect each other,” she added. Kidman has also had a bumpy year on-screen, with the thriller “Before I Go to Sleep” last month her worst ever large scale opening, taking just over US$2
million after a wide release across 1,935 theatres. In that movie, Kidman plays a woman suffering from chronic amnesia who wakes up every morning with no recollection of her life from her early 20s onwards. Its weak opening marked another disappointing flop for Kidman after “Grace of Monaco,” which was booed at the Cannes festival earlier this year and savaged by critics. Kidman said she chose to make the movie “Paddington” because she wanted something her daughters with singer Keith Urban -Sunday, six, and Faith, three -- could enjoy. “There’s nothing like sitting in the premiere of a kids’ film, where you hear them all laughing,” she said.
Phil Collins cancels Miami concert over voice problems Agence France-Presse
MIAMI - English rock singer Phil Collins was forced to cancel his first solo concert in more than four years after suffering problems with his voice, US media reported Monday. The 63-year-old Genesis front man was due to perform at Miami
Beach’s Fillmore theater on Saturday in a benefit gig for his charitable foundation, but he pulled out at the last minute. “We tried to do it, but my voice sounded bad at rehearsal. And at soundcheck it sounded worse,” Collins was quoted as saying by the Miami New Times.
Collins has largely withdrawn from live performances in recent years, preferring to spend more time with his family. Neither Collins, who has sold more than 100 million records, nor the concert organizers have given further details on the nature of the problems affecting the singer’s voice.
IBP/Wawan
Thousands of people took part in Palebon Ceremony for Sosrobahu technique founder, DR. Ir Tjokorda Raka Sukawati on Tuesday (9/12).
Ubud paying last tribute to Sosrobahu founder
IBP
GIANYAR - Palebon or cremation ceremony became the last tribute from Ubud and Bali’s people for Sosrobahu technique founder, DR. Ir Tjokorda Raka Sukawati. Large ceremony of royal family was held on Tuesday (9/12). Even, the ritual carrying nine-storey body container (bade) from Puri Kantor Ubud to Dalem Puri cemetery was faster than usual. Ceremony to carry down the body (nedunang layon), held around 12:30 pm, begin with the memorial ceremony by military
and police personnel. Subsequently, the body rose to nine-storey bade as high as 24 meters. With the beat of gong percussion, bade
which designed specifically for this ritual, start to be carried by 400 people from Ubud. “It used to take around 30 minutes for us to carry bade to cemetery, but now, it only took around 15 minutes,” stated Tjokorda Arta Ardana Sukawati that was met after palebon ceremony. “We, in the sake of our family, would like to say thank you to all people that make this ritual ceremony a great success,” he added.
Pattent Raka Sukawati was famous because he found Sosrobahu technique which a great use in road construction. The technique is a road construction technique which allows long stretches of flyovers to be constructed above existing main roads with a minimum of disruption to the traffic. The technique was designed by Tjokorda Raka Sukawati and involves the construction of the horizontal supports for the highway beside the existing road,
which is then lifted and turned 90 degrees angle before being placed on the top of the vertical supports to form the flyover pylons. This technique is of considerable value in increasing road mileage in large cities where there is a restricted space for new roads and where the closure of existing roads for the length of time to build a flyover using normal construction techniques would impose significant economic costs.
Continued on page 6