Chef’Special celebrates anniversary in Ziggo Dome: ‘Can continue for another thirty years’ | Music

Chef’Special exists fifteen years this year and the Haarlem band willcelebrate that in April 2023 with a concert in the Ziggo Dome. Singer JoshuaNolet thinks he can continue for at least another thirty years, he says inconversation with NU.nl.

By Michiel Vos

“Our management pointed out that we have been around for fifteen years and Iwas quite shocked. It sounds like we are getting old and we are actuallygetting old,” laughs 34-year-old Nolet. “But the more I think about it, themore special I find it. We’ve been through so much together and it’s nice toreflect on that.”

“The five of us have become colleagues and family of each other. We spent alot of time together. In small houses where we worked on new music and in tourbuses where we traveled city and country. You just have to survive together .”

That has been the case for fifteen years now. Chef’Special plans to delve deepinto the archives for the anniversary concert. And that while she last yearwith Afraid Of The Dark the biggest hit of their career yet.

“We also want to play some songs from before we released our first album,”explains Nolet. “We all have demos of half-finished songs from the time wewent to all the surf camps to jam. We’re diving into that now to see ifthere’s anything cool we can play live.”

A new album for the concert is not in it, but he does not rule out some newsongs. The band will spend a lot of time in the studio in the coming period.

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‘Sometimes I feel like that nineteen-year-old kid again’

Chef’Special was in 2017 for the first time with its own concert in the ZiggoDome. That performance is certainly in the top ten of the band’s most specialperformances for Nolet. “At such a big show, it is a challenge to reach andget everyone on board, also in the back and on the second ring. You also wantto make it intimate at times so that everyone feels involved. That worked thenand there I was happy with it. I want that feeling again.”

The Ziggo Dome can accommodate about 17,000 people. But the singer is notafraid of nerves. “I will definitely have them, but I welcome them at such amoment. That means it is important to me. Suppose I go on stage almostuninterested, then it will be a less good show anyway.”

Chef’Special’s anniversary party started a few weeks ago with the release of_You And I_. The song is about all the people who had an impact on you, butwho are now no longer in your life. “We wanted to celebrate what those peoplehave contributed to your life, even if they are no longer with you. Forexample, in fifteen years the necessary people have come and gone. We cherishwhat we have shared with them.”

For Nolet, it feels like the first fifteen years of Chef’Special have flownby. He sees plenty of future in the band. “We still challenge each other,surprise ourselves and inspire each other. Sometimes I just feel like that19-year-old kid again. Like we’ve only just started.”

New Strange Spanish Movie on Netflix: Rainbow

Throw the Wizard of Oz in the blender with films by Pedro Almodóvar and youhave Rainbow, the new film from Spanish actor and director Paco León. TheNetflix film is also full of references to rock musicals like Pink Floyd: TheWall, magic-realistic fantasies, road trip sagas and surreal drama. It seemslike a risky experiment for director/co-writer Paco León to give such asuccessful musical a new impulse. But he succeeds wonderfully in this film,which has been on Netflix and in Spanish cinemas since the end of September2022. The glossy Spain magazine ESPANJE! wrote a review. The trailer can beseen at the bottom of this article.

The fact that the film is a joy to watch is partly due to the great acting ofone of the old muses of Almodóvar, the now 77-year-old Spanish actress CarmenMaura. Carmen Machi, who we saw in the Netflix comedy ‘Amor de madre’ earlierin 2022, is also doing well. But it’s all about Dora, played masterfully bythe very young 18-year-old actress and singer Dora Postigo.

NICE! subscribe now __on SPAIN! which publishes a 100-page glossy magazinefour times a year. In front of only €24.95 you get a €10 discount(normally €34.95) for the current edition and the four upcoming editions.CLICK HERE __and sign up to get ESPANJE right away! to read (also nice asa gift of course).

In the film, Dora celebrates her 16th birthday. She eats cake with her father,who raised her on his own as the storm rages around their house. When she asksabout her mother and understands that she is still alive, she runs away fromhome with her dog Toto as the tornado seems to swallow everything. Fate bringsDora to Coco (Carmen Maura), an annoying woman whose husband runs a fashionempire, and her sister Maribel (Carmen Machi), who claims to be Dora’smaternal grandmother. The old man dies and a gun is fired, or maybe not inthat order, because what is truth?

Coco immediately points to Dora as the killer in order not to go to jail andto secure the inheritance. It is of course a lie. But Dora runs away anyway.Along the way, she meets the foolish and gullible Muñeco (brilliantly playedby Ayax Pedrosa) who works chained on a scrap yard. She frees him and theymove on together. Then they meet José Luis (Luis Bermejo) who is about tocommit suicide on the edge of a cliff. He also joins them. Together they meetAkin (Wekafore Jibril) at a wild party. After being attacked by his ownbrother for being gay, he too decides to join Dora and her friends on amagical road trip.

You can see The Wizard of Oz in everything. But what was that again? In 1900,The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, a book by the American author Frank L. Baum, waspublished. The story became world famous when it was made into a movie in1939. The Wizard of Oz, starring Judy Garland, was full of hits such as Overthe Rainbow, which is also what the title of this Netflix film refers to.Baum’s book has been copied, imitated and parsed endlessly. The best-knownversion is probably The Wiz, with Diana Ross and Michael Jackson from 1978.Netflix’s revival of this is not very original, but the film itself is. Thereare many references to the earlier versions. We see the lion again and evenMichael Jackson comes along on a cloud. Also the scarecrow without a brain andthe tin man without a heart are easy to recognize.

Although Rainbow is not a musical, music does play a major role in the film,as you can see from this soundtrack. There are lots of musical interludes andfreaky dance scenes. The moments of ecstasy offer Dora and her friends who areweighed down by the judgments of others a way out of the hard daily life. Inthe end, fate seems to favor Dora, but she may be too fond of the life she hadwith her new friends or choose another truth. A wonderful film for a longautumn or winter evening. And Dora just might be the next Carmen Maura. What atalent!

SPAIN! __Travel and culture magazine is the Dutch-language glossy aboutSpain and the Spanish-speaking world that appears four times a year in theNetherlands and Belgium. SPAIN! __is a high-quality journalism magazinewith inspiring travel reports, beautiful interviews, fascinating columns,delicious recipes and hundreds of tips for lovers of Spain. Read moreinformation on the website espanje.nl __

Mother Britney Spears apologizes and begs for forgiveness: “Please unblock me” | showbiz

CelebritiesBritney Spears (40) likes to use Instagram as an outlet. Sheregularly shares videos and posts where she writes off all her worries andthoughts. Last Saturday was no different, but this time she turned to herfamily. “A heartfelt apology might help me close it all,” she wrote. Hermother Lynne Spears (67) did not hesitate for a moment and respondedimmediately.

JOVS 05-10-22, 12:45

Latest update: 05-10-22, 12:47 Source: Page Six, Mirror, Instagram

Lynne Spears has (finally) apologized publicly to her daughter Britney Spears.The singer was finally able to break free from the strict curatorship of herfather, Jamie Spears, last year, but the family ties have not healed sincethen, on the contrary. Britney uses her newfound freedom to regularly sharecandid posts on her Instagram page. Last Saturday she had her heart lookedagain and addressed these difficult family ties. “For me, the real problem isthat to this day my family is not aware of any harm. They believe they havedone nothing wrong at all. They could at least take responsibility for theiractions and admit that they hurt me,” he said indignantly.

She went on to say that sincere apologies would already go a long way towardclosing things up for her, but she’s surprised her family members continue toact like everything’s okay. “From their response, it appears that I have nofamily that appreciates or respects me. As much as I loved them, it’ssomething I’ll probably never get over.”

Mother’s reaction

Mother Lynne immediately responded to this cry for help. “I’m so sorry foryour pain! I’ve regretted it for years,” she wrote. “I love you so much and Imiss you. Deep down you know how much I love you. I apologize for anything andeverything that hurt you.” She continued with a plea, “Please unblock me so wecan talk about it in person.”

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Declaration against Johnny de Mol dismissed, legal advisors of ex-girlfriend prosecuted show

The Public Prosecution Service (OM) dismisses the report of assault andattempted murder that his ex-partner Shima Kaes made against Johnny de Mol.The investigation has not led to sufficient evidence, it was announced thisafternoon. De Mol has ‘always had confidence in the investigation and in thisoutcome’, the Talpa presenter said through his management.

However, the legal advisers of his ex-girlfriend Kaes, lawyer Karim Aachbounand his office mate Ad Aerts, are being prosecuted by the Public ProsecutionService, a spokesperson for the Amsterdam public prosecutor’s office confirms.In November last year, the duo was reported to have attempted to threaten theDe Mol family, a legal term for blackmail.

Held hostage

Since that counter-declaration, Kaes and her agent ‘constantly seek themedia’, according to Peter Plasman, lawyer for De Mol. It concerns ‘repeats ofthe accusations made earlier’. This hinders De Mol’s personal and socialfunctioning. “He is more or less taken hostage by the actions of Mrs. Kaes andher agent,” Plasman said.

The legal advisers now have to answer for this before the court. Plasman saysthat John de Mol and Johnny de Mol are ‘satisfied’ that the advisers ‘willhave to account for their action before the criminal court’.

Insufficient evidence

Kaes, who had a relationship with Johnny de Mol between 2014 and 2015, hasbeen arguing with the family for a long time. She states that several violentincidents have taken place between her and Johnny: in Mexico, at theEdisongala in Amsterdam and in Ibiza. At the end of 2020, Kaes filed acomplaint against her ex-fiancé for attempted assault and manslaughter.

De Mol was heard as a suspect in the criminal investigation. In thatinterrogation, he firmly denied the assault. Three witnesses presented by Kaesgave a statement in the investigation. These statements provided the PublicProsecution Service with ‘insufficient support’ for the report.

According to the Public Prosecution Service, the sound fragments supplied byKaes contain ‘conversations without sufficient context’. In addition, thesupplied photos cannot be dated and the injury in the photos is not clear. Theinjury statements have also turned out to be ‘insufficiently unambiguous’,according to the Public Prosecution Service.

HLF8

De Mol announced the end of an episode of his daily talk show at the end ofApril, after a new accusation of inappropriate behaviour HLF8 to stop thepresentation for the time being. “In addition to the previous allegations andallegations, a new anonymous false accusation has been made this week. Thismakes it impossible for me and the editors to continue this work,” he said atthe time.

The anonymous report followed Kaes’s earlier report. Earlier this year, thePublic Prosecution Service concluded that ‘no concrete accusation or criminaloffense can be derived from this report’. De Mol has always categoricallydenied both allegations.

According to De Mol, it was ‘a tough time, so I’m relieved that this decisionhas now been made. I’ll take some time, and I’ll keep you posted when I resumewhat work. I want to thank everyone for the support and sweet messages I havereceived lately.”

Return

A spokesperson for SBS 6 is pleased with the dismissal of the report. ,,We arevery happy for Johnny. We will discuss in the short term when he will resumehis activities.”

De Mol will return to television next week. He will be featured on SBS 6 withthe program from Wednesday Restaurant misunderstanding. Those broadcasts hadalready been recorded.

Lena Dunham explains how her marriage to Luis Felber changed her new movie ‘Catherine Called Birdy’

‘Catherine Called Birdy’

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By Lena Dunham’s own account, her newest movie, Catherine Called Birdy ,might have had a very different tone if she’d made it a few years ago. Basedon Karen Cushman’s 1994 novel, the medieval times-set movie follows theeponymous teenager (played by breakout Game of Thrones star Bella Ramsey) asshe faces the prospect of being forced into marriage by her well-meaning, butcash-strapped mom and dad ( Doctor Who ‘s Billie Piper and Fleabag ‘sAndrew Scott respectively). Meanwhile, behind the scenes, Dunham was livingout her own marriage story, embarking on a whirlwind romance with musician,Luis Felber, that culminated with them walking down the aisle in September2021 — nearly a year before the movie’s premiere at the 2022 TorontoInternational Film Festival.

“It’s funny, I got engaged literally two weeks after we wrapped the movie,”the writer/director tells Yahoo Entertainment now. “And I’d spent a few yearsmaking this movie about the oppressive nature of marriage!” But Dunham creditsher fast-moving relationship with Felber — who serves as Catherine CalledBirdy ‘s executive music producer — with lightening that formerly”oppressive” mood.

“That very romantic monologue that Andrew Scott delivers to his wife as she’sin childbirth,” she explains. “That very much came after I’d met my husband,and I was like, ‘Maybe being married wouldn’t all be suffering and pain! Maybethere’d be some really nice stuff too.'”

LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 20: Luis Felber and Lena Dunham attend theCatherine Called Birdy UK premiere at The Curzon Mayfair on September 20, 2022in London, England.  (Photo by Dave J Hogan/GettyImages)

Luis Felber and Lena Dunham attend the Catherine Called Birdy UK premiere atThe Curzon Mayfair on September 20, 2022 in London, England. (Photo by Dave JHogan/Getty Images)

Dunham has been exploring love, sex and the challenges of committedrelationships in all of her work, from HBO’s girls to her recent Sundancehit, Sharp Stick. At the same time, her own real-life romances have alsovery much been in the public eye, with the press reporting on her variousrelationships and break-ups. Now that she’s married, she doesn’t plan to stopdrawing on her own lived experiences for her art.

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“The stuff that I write now is still asking questions about marriage andmonogamy in a different way … It’s asking questions about whether theseconventions are still useful, what’s meaningful about them. In the case ofthis film, it was really interesting to go back in time and push some of thesame questions I’ve always been asking in my work in a medieval setting andwith an eye more towards speaking towards the younger audience. in totally newways.”

As a member of the movie’s target audience — not to mention its star — Ramsey,who recently celebrated her 19th birthday, naturally has a lot of thoughtsabout what marriage means to her generation. “I was talking with Andrewrecently, and he was describing how marriage back then was a businessarrangement… it’s only recently become a romantic thing. It’s a bit of paperthat like legalizes two people being together.”

Andrew Scott and Bella Ramsey in Lena Dunham's latest film, Catherine CalledBirdy.  (Photo: @Amazon/Courtesy EverettCollection)Andrew Scottand Bella Ramsey in Lena Dunham's latest film, Catherine Called Birdy.(Photo: @Amazon/Courtesy EverettCollection)

Andrew Scott and Bella Ramsey in Lena Dunham’s latest movie, Catherine CalledBirdy. (Photo: @Amazon/Courtesy Everett Collection)

“But then I was speaking to someone who got married just a few weeks ago,”Ramsey continues. “She said that actually she feels this sense of beingsettled and of being secure … that she didn’t expect to feel. I don’t haveparticularly strong feelings [about marriage] at the moment. I just find itfascinating.”

While the institution of marriage has changed a lot since Birdy’s 13th centurydays, there are still parts of the world — including in the US — wherearranged unions are still commonplace. More seriously, there are also caseswhere young women have been pushed to wed as part of forced marriages. Dunhamsays that she doesn’t have specific objections to arranged marriages providedthat its consensual for both parties, and is definitely opposed to marriagebeing forced upon women.

“Some people culturally want to enter into an arranged marriage, and theythink it’s the most useful way to meet someone,” she says. “But the idea of​​forced anything is a problem, and I think that’s what the movie is saying —it’s a very live and let live movie. Do it any way you want to as long as itcomes with the dose of freedom.”

TORONTO, ONTARIO - SEPTEMBER 11: (LR) Lena Dunham and Bella Ramsey attendtheTORONTO,ONTARIO - SEPTEMBER 11: (LR) Lena Dunham and Bella Ramsey attend the

Dunham and Bella Ramsey at the Toronto International Film Festival premiere of_Catherine Called Birdy_ in Sept. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images)

like A Knight ‘s Tale _and _Marie Antoinette before it, Catherine CalledBirdy takes a decidedly modern approach to depicting the past, incorporatingcontemporary slang and songs into its period setting. Ramsey says thatinfluenced her performance as well. “In the initial audition tape, there was alittle paragraph about how if Birdy existed in 2021, she’d have a weird, nichememe page on social media with like five followers,” the actress says,laughing. “She’s just a very curious person and I think she’d be astonished bymodern technology.”

As for Birdy’s future, both Ramsey and Dunham think that she perhaps neversettles down. “We’ve wondered if maybe Birdy is able to shrug off marriage anddevelop a life,” the director says. “Could Birdy be the first older eccentricwoman in her area who figures out having her own prosperous farm and doesexactly whatever she wants? Or maybe Birdy does fall in love with someone anddoes decide that marriage on her own terms is something she’s willing to do.”

“It’s a choice and she’s made that decision for herself,” Ramsey adds of heralter ego. “I think all she wants is to have some choice and freedom andcontrol over her life, because she feels like she has zero.” Either way, sheoffers up her favorite piece of dialogue from the film as evidence of whyBirdy is such a special character. “I loved saying the line, ‘I am not a ladysir, and cannot mimic one.’ I think that sort of encapsulates her wholefeelings throughout the film, and I felt those words very deeply.”

Video produced by Kat Vasquez and edited by Schuyler Stone

Catherine Called Birdy is currently playing in theaters and premieresOct. 7 on Prime Video

Wynonna Judd addresses rumor she’s ‘fighting’ sister Ashley about mom Naomi’s estate

Wynonna Judd is addressing rumors she’s locked in a bitter battle with hersister, Ashley Judd, about their mom Naomi Judd’s estate.

“Someone told me while I was at Ashley’s house, ‘Hey, did you know thatthey’re saying this about you?'” the Judds singer, 58, told people magazine.”I went, ‘Huh? I’m fighting with Ashley? Oh. Again?'”

So the rumors they are fighting are untrue? “Fighting over what?” she replied.”I have such a great life. Ashley has a great life. Why would we be fightingover the will?”

After her singing partner mom’s death by suicide in April, it was reportedthat Naomi cut Wynonna and Ashley out of her will. Naomi, who died at 76,appointed her husband of 33 years, Larry Strickland, as executor of her $25million estate with “full authority and discretion” over everything. Accordingto reports, Wynonna was “upset” at being excluded from the will, believing”she was a major force behind her and Naomi’s success.” A report in thetabloid star claimed the sisters were going “head-to-head” in a battle overthe estate.

Wynonna acknowledged to people that, yes, Strickland is the executor ofNaomi’s estate. But when he dies, she and her actress sister will then “split”the estate. She has no plans to contest the will.

“I am the last person in this family — and if Ashley was here, I’d hope she’dagree with me — who knows stuff like this,” she said. “I’m not savvy enough togo, ‘I’m going to contest the will.’ It never occurred to me.”

Besides, Naomi’s death has only made their bond deeper, said Wynonna of herhalf-sister. (Wynonna’a father is the late Charles Jordan while Ashley’s dadis Michael Ciminella.)

“I feel like we’re connected in a way that is so different because I’m anorphan,” she said. “Both my parents are gone, and I’m relying on Ashley… We’revulnerable with each other, and we’re tender. As sisters, we disagree on somuch. But when it comes to our mother, we both look at each other and go, ‘Shewas quite the character.'”

Story continues

However, Wynonna acknowledged that the sisters had points of estrangement intheir lives, “so we’ve missed out on a lot of time together.” They’ve used alife coach to help them work on their relationship.

“Ashley and I are very different people, and we are learning that we have morein common than we don’t,” she said. “We’ve been able to work the process ourlife coach has given us: communication, compromise and compassion. In mydisagreements with Ashley and Mom, I never gave up loving them, because I knewbehind all that, there was someplace to meet and connect upon. I tell people:Try to find something that you have in common. Ashley and I, when it all goesto hell, can play cards and get along.”

She added, “The relationship I have with my sister is the most powerful in mylife.”

After Naomi’s shocking death, Wynonna decided to continue with the tour motherand daughter had planned. Ashley joined her sister on stage this week in asweet moment. In an Instagram post, Ashley said they are “deeply united.”

“Our walk with our sibling is often our longest relationship in life. I amincandescently blessed that this women has been my sister all my life,” Ashleywrote on Instagram along with a video of them together on stage. “Deeplyunited after our mother’s painful death, we share grief and joy, poignancy andhope, and the absolute commitment to be of service to others. As during ourlong season of mourning we know ourselves and each other with greatertenderness and nuance, I am in awe of her vulnerability and power as she takesthe stage to channel her voice for connection…”

The siblings are also united in a battle to keep investigation reports aboutNaomi’s death sealed. It’s currently being kicked around in the courts, withTennessee’s state Supreme Court sending the case back to the lower ChanceryCourt for another hearing.

Ashley, who discovered Naomi — who battled mental illness — in the musiclegend’s final moments, has said the “trauma of discovering and then holdingher laboring body haunts my nights” in a plea to keep the investigation fileprivate. Among the information that could be released are interviews conductedby police with Ashley and others “when we were at our most vulnerable” andNaomi’s “profoundly intimate personal and medical information,” the DoubleJeopardy actress said in August.

Much criticism of seventh episode of ‘House of the Dragon’: “I couldn’t see it” | TV

TVIf you’ve watched the seventh episode of ‘House of the Dragon’, there’s agood chance you couldn’t see anything that actually happened in it. Theepisode was so dark in color that viewers had difficulty recognizing the facesof their favorite characters. The dark episode is said to have been aconscious choice by the makers, although many Twitter users clearly do notagree with that decision.

Fans of ‘Game of Thrones’ may have had a ‘déjà vu’ watching the seventhepisode of the HBO prequel ‘House of the Dragon’. During the episode ‘The LongNight’ in the final season of the original series, there were also some scenesthat were too dark to see. Remarkably, both that episode and the seventhepisode of ‘House of the Dragon’ were both directed by the same person: Emmywinner Miguel Sapochnik.

When many fans expressed frustration (in the form of memes) after watching theseventh part of the prequel on Twitter, one of the HBO accounts on the socialmedium defended the director’s choice: “The dark lighting of the scene was aconscious creative decision,” they wrote.

(Read more below HBO’s Tweet.)

HBOMaxHelp > @HBOMaxHelp >

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But the fans were clearly not pleased with this. Many of them claim that theepisode is “unwatchable” because the screen is simply too dark. When the samereactions came to the dark episode of ‘Game of Thrones’, the directorresponded: “The dark-lit cinematography was necessary for the atmosphere ofthe series. From the perspective of where the story was supposed to go – whichwas to reach a surreal, chaotic climax – we needed an environment that wasfriendly to that,” Sapochnik said. It is not yet known what his argument isthis time.

Check out some Tweets about the seventh episode below:

“A photo of my face watching ‘House of the Dragon’ last night.”

socialist soprano memes > @gabagoolmarx >

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“House of the Dragon” maintains the classic Game of Thrones tradition ofmaking an episode so dark it’s almost unwatchable.”

Brendan Hodges > @metaplexmovies >

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“Me who have to squint every week to see something from ‘House of the

‘If we cut off the eye of a shrimp, they can reproduce every week’ | Cooking & Eating

Cooking & EatingLarge shrimps in the Dutch supermarket usually come fromshrimp mothers with an eye cut off. Due to the mutilation, they would producemore eggs, as can be seen tonight in the TV broadcast of Inspection Serviceof Value.

According to emeritus professor of animal physiology Gert Flik, ​​called the’shrimp professor’ in the broadcast, it is a normal practice in the world ofshrimp farming. “Hormones are made in the shrimp’s eye stem that inhibitnormal processes. So if you remove that brake, the shrimp grow faster and theegg production in females is increased.”

According to Flik, ​​this has been happening since the 1970s, when shrimp werefarmed on a large scale. ,,If the growers have the facilities in house to doit properly, they will certainly do that. Millions of tons are being grown,that amount can no longer be caught.”

Many Dutch fish sellers and shrimp importers are not aware of this method,according to questions from the program. They don’t know what’s going on inshrimp farms, especially in the Far East. Most of the consumer shrimps onDutch shelves come from there.

Quote >>> It only hurts a little bit for a day>> Thai shrimp farmer

Disoriented and confused

In Thailand, the makers of Inspection Service of Value guest of a shrimpfarmer who shows how one of the eyes of a female shrimp is cut off. “If we cutoff the eye, they can reproduce every week. If we don’t, it will take longerthan two weeks.” He is laconic about the burden that the shrimps have: “Itonly hurts a little bit for a day.”

Anne Hilhorst of Lekker Dier sees it differently. “They swim arounddisoriented and confused. In this way, they are limited in their long-termdevelopment. You make a shrimp that will lay eggs much earlier and muchyounger and that is exactly what the breeder wants.”

The broadcast of Inspection Service of Value : Thursday 6 October at 20.25on NPO 3.

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the pearl of Adil and Bilall and three other new movie releases previewed for you

‘Rebel’ by Adil and Bilall is an overwhelming viewing experience like we havenever experienced in Belgian cinema ★★★★✩

By Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah, with Aboubakr Bensaihi, Lubna Azabal, AmirEl Arbi and Tara Abboud

God be praised and Allah praised! To have something Adil El Arbic andBilall Fallah made an incredibly beautiful film with ‘Rebel’! An epiclasting more than two hours that takes us from the snack bars in Molenbeek tothe IS training camps in Raqqa, punctuated with song and dance and for desserta severed head that is far from finished. When we put it that way, it allsounds rather out of place, and yet this is a perfectly cool and controlledfilm, an overwhelming viewing experience such as we have never experiencedbefore in Belgian cinema.

Now some find it insulting that Adil and Bilall have made a film about a youngBelgian jihadist who will fight in Syria on the side of IS in 2013. We canonly say that IS had not yet shown its true horror face to the world in 2013,and that even we, from our lazy chair, felt some understanding for those guyswho, just like Kamal in ‘Rebel ‘, went to Syria to help in the hospitals ofAleppo or to fight against the cruel dictator Bashar al-Assad. Some seesimilarities between Kamal and Oskar Schindler the noble Nazi from’Schindler’s List’, but we saw more similarities with Chris ( CharlieSheen ), the idealistic student who voluntarily travels to Vietnam in’Platoon’ and, once in the brooding reality of the jungle, is constantly onthe brink of physical and mental collapse.

If ‘Rebel’ makes one thing crystal clear, it’s that Adil and Bilall are attheir very best when, just like Spike Lee and Oliver Stone in theirmost relevant films, merging their cinematic bravado with their socialconcerns. Their virtuosity is best shown when they pan their camera around abombed-out hospital in Aleppo, the blood and grit and panic of the crowdsplashing you in the face. Tarantino would say: ‘ Now that’s what I calldirecting, man!’ A dangerously flared grill fire in a snack bar forms theopening salvo of a beautifully choreographed musical number that makes uswonder how they managed it technically. Incidentally, those musicalintermezzos do not serve to inject a bit of cheerfulness into the drama, butto emphasize the spinning emotions of the characters.

Thinking back to the surprisingly moving scene with the muttering head cut, wecan only admire the audacity of Adil and Bilall. With ‘Rebel’ they made a filmabout our time, our society, our losses, and about the grief of the mothers ofwhatever faith they lose their children to recruiters, ratters and othermanipulative bastards. ‘Rebel’ is their best movie yet, and something tells usthe duo is far from the peak of their growth curve. “Extremely powerful,”Oliver Stone said of “Rebel.” Nothing to add.

‘Triangle of Sadness’ is very hard to laugh at, but the thorny questions thefilm raises sears the soul ★★★½✩

By Ruben Östlund, with Thobias Thorwid, Woody Harrelson and Charlbi Dean

The Swedish director Ruben Ostlund is as notorious for his ruthless humoras for the sharp arrows he aims at humanity in his films (‘The Square’,’Turist’). In Golden Palm winner ‘Triangle of Sadness’, the account of aremarkable sea cruise, Östlund unleashes his wrath on the one percent of theworld’s population who single-handedly own half the wealth on Earth. And how:About halfway through the cruise, Östlund drops the filthy rich passengers offthe luxury yacht, in a frenzied scene that may now be called as legendary asthe Mr. Creosote in ‘The Meaning of Life’. ‘Triangle of Sadness’ is veryfunny, but the thorny questions that Östlund raises in the meantime – aboutgender differences, about the cursed patriarchy, about the gap between richand poor and what to do about it – sear the soul.

‘Blonde’ remains blind to the Marilyn Monroe who was more than a sex object

By Andrew Dominik, with Ana de Armas, Bobby Cannavale and Adrien Brody

The moment Ana de Armas first appears as Marilyn Monroe in ‘Blonde’, aroundthe 17th minute, we froze in our seat: because Ana is Marilyn! She really doeslook like her!

Admittedly not like two drops of water: in her voice you can hear a hint of aCuban accent – the Armas was born in Santa Cruz del Norte – and hopefullyno one will blame us when we notice, walking on eggshells as carefully aspossible, that the slender Ana lacks a certain, er, fullness in the physicalsense. And yet there is something of the magic of the real Marilyn aroundher. Her childlike innocence, her sparkling wit, her unrelenting charm, herendearing sheepishness (like when Marilyn has no idea how to eat a boiledegg), the garland of tragedy that hangs around her: all the characteristics wehave learned over the years. , rightly or wrongly, we have come to associatewith Marilyn, we find very beautiful back in the rendition of the Armas. Herewith that Oscar nomination!

It’s a shame that the film is not aware of the performance of the leadactress. It’s not often that we shy away from a blonde – gentlemen preferblondes , not true! – but on this ‘Blonde’ we were finally blown away. Thefirst point of discussion is the approach: director and screenwriter AndrewDominik Without much sense of nuance, Marilyn portrays Marilyn in ‘Blonde’as an innocent little bird released into the hell of patriarchal Hollywood.Already in one of the first scenes we see how Marilyn is raped during anaudition without a boo or yuck by a studio boss who goes by the name ‘Mr Z’:hmmmm, could it be Daryll F. Zanuck the big boss of Twentieth CenturyPictures?

In the most shocking scene, the president, stretched out on a hotel bed, grabsKennedy Marilyn by the curls and he forces her into a blowjob in a longheld sickening shot. It could well be that Marilyn actually had to undergothose humiliations, but a disclaimer is appropriate here: the scenes inquestion do not arise from facts, but from fiction, rumors and fictions.’Blonde’ is based on a novel by Joyce Carol Oates , who used Marilyn’slife as the basis for an (allegedly splendid) work of fiction. Anyway, byportraying Marilyn as a butterfly mortified, abused, exploited, and ultimatelydestroyed by maledom, Dominik joins an expanding movement that hasposthumously proclaimed Marilyn a martyr of feminism.

“Look at what happened to Marilyn!” this is how you could summarize themessage of that movement (and of ‘Blonde’). “Look at the brutality she had toendure, and you’ll see why feminism was desperately needed!” Or like thewriter Nancy Friday it said, “Look closely at Marilyn’s life, girls.Because this is what happens to you when you let yourself be treated as a sexobject!’ Correctamundo, correct and completely true, but the devil’s advocatein us would like to throw a question into the group: Doesn’t that approachignore the fact that Marilyn was much more than just a martyr?

Don’t forget: for every soul who proclaims Marilyn a martyr of feminism, thereis a biographer who portrays her as an ambitious, intelligent woman who knewperfectly that her value lay in her curves and her curves. And wasn’t she alsoa great performer who had the unique gift of enchanting the whole world? Put100 Flemish and international celebs on stage and have them perform ‘I WannaBe Loved By You’, and we’ll give you a note that none of them will be able tomatch Marilyn’s version – even Harry Styles not, if he put a blond wig onhis crown. But for those qualities – her engulfing naturalness on the bigwhite screen, her magnetic appearance, yes even her acting talent that bubblesunder the skin – ‘Blonde’ remains completely blind.

In ‘Blonde’ we see how the gifted Marilyn is reduced to a sex object by mostmen, but the question is: does not Dominik make the same mistake by portrayingher in most scenes as a ruthless romper? Anyway: enough material to put up asturdy tree in the cafe afterwards. But you know, overall, it’s not evenDominik’s slightly narrow-minded angle that troubled us. No, it is mainly hisfilm style that we have been rejected. Instead of opting for a classicbiographical account, Dominik tries to draw us into a slightly surreal streamof images with his dreamy photography and his trance-inducing music score.

In that respect ‘Blonde’ can actually be compared well with ‘Spencer’, theidiosyncratic biopic that pablo Larrain last year made over LadyDi. Dominik also used that poetic style in 2007’s ‘The Assassination ofJesse James By the Coward Robert Ford’, with wonderful results, but this timehe misses the point in most scenes. During an abortion, the cinematographergives us a point of view shot from Marilyn’s vagina, and during the blowjobshe gives to JFK, images of surface-to-air missiles actually pass through – asif we are in a ‘The Naked Gun’-esque farce – like phalluses pointing upwards.Okay, there’s nothing wrong with a little comic relief, but the momentMarilyn’s unborn fetus starts talking out loud, we thought: okay, Andrew, nowit’s enough with your imagery-of-licking vest.

Finally, one more thought. We wouldn’t want to feed them, all those writers,essayists, journalists and filmmakers who have been researching, commenting,analyzing, claiming, interpreting and reinterpreting Marilyn’s life since herdeath on August 4, 1962. But we may never know who she really was. We’d loveto offer her a gin fizz and have a chat with her, but hey, she’s been underthe sod for 60 years. Hopefully she rests in peace.

Watching ‘Toute une nuit’ is like having a time capsule to the eightiesopening up before your eyes, with beautifully lit images ★★★★✩

By Chantal Akerman, with Aurore Clément, Frank Aendenboom and Tchéky Karyo

Chantal Akerman the Belgian supreme lady of poetic slow cinema, owes herworldwide fame – among others Martin Scorsese and Gus Van Sant his fan– especially her chef d’oeuvre ‘Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080Bruxelles’, but also the slightly lesser-known ‘Toute une nuit’ from 1982,which can be seen this week in a restored version, is a trembling chunk ofurban poetry. Watching ‘Toute une nuit’ is like opening a beautiful timecapsule from the eighties before your eyes (There, a Citroën DS!), but thepassions that rise from the beautifully lit images are universal and timeless.’Toute une nuit’ makes you want to go into town and – just like the characters– to dance a slow in a café to a tearjerker of Gino Lorenzi. We alreadysaid it: slow cinema!

Rico: ‘My farewell may be theatrical’

Why this particular number?

“This song touches me every time I hear it. It left an indelible impression onme when I sang it as a nineteen-year-old boy with my father. We playedtogether as amateurs in the opera Faust and on the evening of the general Atrehearsal we heard that my grandmother had just died. The premiere was alsoheld on the day of her funeral, and then we stood there and sang together.This song is so powerful instrumentally and instinctively works towards aclosing piece.”

“Two years ago my father died of corona and then this song sounded again. In asmall circle but no less impressive. The pastoral worker used the instrumentalpieces to say a few more words, that was really beautiful. I would love it ifthis song is also played at my farewell, although I also realize that I myselfno longer hear it. if they take comfort in it, it’s all right.”

What does it say about your life?

“It says something about my childhood, about the family I come from. Operaplayed an important role in our home. My father always sang in operas and inthis way he transferred the love for music to me. When I was eighteen I wentwith two friends also at the opera and the association was overjoyed thatthere were finally some men again.”

“All three of us came from a church choir and wanted to do more with music.Faust also has something religious, so that fit nicely. I like thattheatrical. I still sing in amateur musicals. Wonderful! And it is notcoincidentally that I have a specialization in voice. my profession. Faust ismy favorite opera, although La Bohème comes close too.”

Where do you prefer to listen to music?

“In a theater, with several people around me, because you immediately sharethe beauty and emotion with each other. I go to the theater very often and Imissed that a lot in corona time. With friends, but just as sweet alone. ThatI can just cycle to DeLaMar and Carré is a great happiness. I also likelistening in the car, because then I don’t have to do anything else. At home,music is mainly a background filling.”

How many lists do you have on Spotify?

“I have piles of CDs and I hardly listen to them. But I don’t throw them awayeither. I don’t make lists on Spotify. Usually I listen to the radio. That canbe 538, but also Radio 1. I’m the last “At that time, especially a fan ofpodcasts. True crime and also fiction. In terms of music it is really not allopera, by the way. Also Robert Long, ABBA, operas, musicals, a lot of jazz andeven Billy Idol. I am an omnivore.”

What is your guilty pleasure?

“The number For A Friend from The Communards. That song immediately swingsme back to the beginning of my speech therapy training. It also touched mevery much at the time and as far as I’m concerned it should also be at myfuneral. And indeed ABBA. When I got the album ABBA Arrival, I didn’t haveEnglish in school yet and I made it ar-rie-val in my head. Only years later atSchiphol did I realize that it was natural arrival used to be.”