Edisi 21 Oktober 2014 | International Bali Post

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I N T E R N A T I O N A L

16 Pages Number 208 6th year

I N T E R N A T I O N A L

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Entertainment

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Brad Pitt war film wraps up London Film Festival Associated Press

LONDON — Brad Pitt was bringing the London Film Festival to a storming conclusion Sunday with “Fury,” David Ayer’s mud- and bloodsplattered tale of a tank crew in the closing days of World War II. The film offers a brutal depiction of combat, but Pitt says filming it has made him a better father to his six children with Angelina Jolie. “This role is a real study in leadership and learning to command respect and because of this, I am now a better father,” said Pitt, who plays a hard-bitten sergeant in command of a Sherman tank crew played by Shia LaBeouf, Logan Lerman, Michael Pena and Jon Bernthal. “This film is about the soldiers’ exhaustion from the cold, hunger and the accumulative effect on a daily basis,” Pitt told reporters before the movie’s blacktie European premiere. “We took that to heart. I hope ... soldiers will walk away from this and feel they are recognized.”

“Fury” is an appropriately unflinching finale for a festival that awarded prizes to films that tackled corruption, gang violence, honor killing and war. Andrey Zvyagintsev’s “Leviathan,” a tragic satire of small-town Russian corruption, was named the festival’s best picture. Ukrainian director Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy won the first-feature award for “The Tribe,” a teen-gang drama set at a school for the deaf and performed entirely in sign language, without subtitles. Actress Sameena Jabeen Ahmed was named best British newcomer for

her performance as a British-Pakistani teenager on the run from her family in “Catch Me Daddy.” The documentary prize went to “Silvered Water, Syria Self-Portrait,” a searing look at the country’s civil war by Paris-based director Ossama Mohammed and Wiam Simav Bedirxan, a schoolteacher who filmed life in the besieged city of Homs. Director Stephen Frears was awarded the British Film Institute’s Fellowship, in recognition of a career that has traveled from the battered streets of Margaret Thatcher’s Britain in “My Beautiful Laundrette,” to 18th-century France in “Dangerous Liaisons,” seedy Los Angeles in “The Grifters” and Buckingham Palace in “The Queen.” The 73-year-old director said that he’d become a filmmaker by accident, and quoted playwright Joe Orton, subject of his 1987 film “Prick Up Your Ears.”

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Tuesday, October 21, 2014 Japan trade, justice ministers quit amid scandals

Inter Milan fights back to draw 2-2 against Napoli

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What They Say In this Aug. 28, 2014 file photo, from left, Writer/Director David Ayer, U.S actors Logan Lerman, Brad Pitt, and Jon Bernthal pose for photographs alongside an original Sherman tank used in the filming and a Jeep, during a photo call for the film, “Fury,” at the Tank museum, in Bovington, Dorset, southern England.

AP Photo/Mark Baker

“May Mr. President (Joko Widodo) find success and do much better for the nation and state,” said former President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

Jay Leno with top US humor prize

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The joke was on Jay Leno as comedians saluted the former “Tonight Show” host Sunday when he received the top U.S. humor prize. Jimmy Fallon, Jerry Seinfeld and Wanda Sykes celebrated Leno’s famous work ethic and poked fun as he received the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor at the Kennedy Center in Washington. Garth Brooks, Kevin Eubanks and Chelsea Handler also paid tribute. Fallon, who replaced Leno this year on “The Tonight Show” after Leno stepped down for the second time, said it was a good time to honor Leno, “a man who has done so much for NBC, so much that we had to celebrate his career on PBS.” On the red carpet before the show, Leno, 64, said “The Tonight Show” years were the best of his life. He said Fallon is bringing “a new dynamic” to the show, and “it’s fun to see it change.” “The truth is, my time was done,” Leno said later in accepting the prize. “When I left ‘The Tonight Show,’ I didn’t leave dead broke like Bill and Hillary. I was able to save.” The award honors people who have had an impact on American society in the tradition of Samuel Clemens, the writer, satirist and social commentator better known as Mark Twain. Past honorees include Carol Burnett, Ellen DeGeneres, Will Ferrell and Bill Cosby. Leno said he had no idea this award was coming and that other honors are phony because people campaign for

them. Leno built his career in standup comedy and still makes more than 100 live performances each year. He inherited the “Tonight Show” from Johnny Carson in 1992, beating out David Letterman, and was the top-rated late-night host for years. Handler and Sykes, two leading female comedians, thanked Leno for giv-

ing them wider exposure on late night TV. Seinfeld said he’s been friends with Leno for 38 years and that the longtime NBC funnyman was his idol. “There’s no one more deserving to get this wonderful award obviously than Jay,” Seinfeld said. “No one — except and I really don’t want to sound bitter here — except maybe me? I mean come on.”

AP Photo/Achmad Ibraham

Indonesian President Joko Widodo gestures to the crowd during a street parade following his inauguration in Jakarta, Indonesia, Monday, Oct. 20, 2014.

Welcome Mr. President! Agence France-Presse

JAKARTA - Joko Widodo, Indonesia’s first leader without deep roots in the era of dictator Suharto, was sworn in as president Monday but faces huge challenges to enact a bold reform agenda. The inauguration, which was attended by foreign dignitaries including US Secretary of State John Kerry and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, capped a remarkable rise for a softly-spoken politician who was brought up in a riverside slum.

AP Photo/Kevin Wolf

Mark Twain Prize honoree Jay Leno tells jokes after being presented with the prize at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor on Sunday, Oct. 19, 2014, in Washington.

“It is my honor to be here. I feel there is huge enthusiasm across the country to welcome the new government. As a friend of Indonesia, we harbor high hopes and optimism for Indonesia in the future,” said Prime Minister Australia Tony Abbott.

Widodo, known by his nickname Jokowi, worked his way up through local politics before securing the presidency in July following a close race against controversial ex-general Prabowo Subianto. He is the country’s first president from outside an ageing band of political and military figures who have ruled the world’s third-biggest democracy since the end of the three-decade Suharto dictatorship in 1998. But fears are growing that a hostile parliament dominated by parties that opposed Widodo at the election, and the new leader’s status as a novice in national politics, could make it impossible for him

to push through reforms aimed at reviving Southeast Asia’s top economy and helping society’s poorest. At a ceremony in parliament, Widodo, wearing a black suit and traditional cap, stood for the national anthem alongside outgoing president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, before taking the oath. “In the name of God, I swear that I will fulfil my obligation as the president of Indonesia as best as I can and as fairly as possible,” he said. Lawmakers and visiting dignitaries packed out the parliament for the ceremony, and there was applause when

Prabowo walked in after speculation he would not attend, the latest sign of a thaw after weeks of political tensions. After the ceremony, Widodo and his new vice president, Jusuf Kalla, will travel in a horse-drawn carriage accompanied by a parade to the presidential palace. In the evening the new leader, a heavy metal fan, is expected to join rock bands on stage at an outdoor concert. About 24,000 police and military personnel were deployed to secure the day’s events. Widodo has set out an ambitious reform agenda to tackle the country’s many problems, but there is concern the notoriously fractious parliament could prove a hindrance. However Prabowo’s appearance at the inauguration was the second sign of easing tensions in just a few days after he unexpectedly met Widodo Friday for the first time since the election and pledged support, and raises hopes for the new leader’s prospects. Continued on page 6

AP Photo/Mark Baker

“I wish good luck to Mr Jokowi and Mr JK to run the new administration of Indonesia,” said Prime Minister Malaysia Najib Razak.

AP Photo/Mark Baker


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