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Perth needs good neighbours, but is a beer a bridge too far these days?
Perth needs good neighbours, but is a beer a bridge too far these days?

Sydney Morning Herald

time16-07-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Perth needs good neighbours, but is a beer a bridge too far these days?

Given Gen Xers were raised wandering the plains of quarter-acre blocks in Perth like suburban hunters and gatherers, we were mostly spared the backyard battles that can erupt between neighbours. But as urban living becomes denser, friction can become more frequent: petty disputes over fences, trees or the unresolved murderous tension of someone butchering John Farnham songs until dawn. To some degree, such front-yard feuds are harmless and ingrained in suburbia. But I'm convinced the recent brouhaha in my street went beyond the norm. After I declined to have a beer with a nearby resident, the person unleashed a series of well-executed insults that made me rustle through my bedroom drawers looking for my old therapist's number. I was impressed by their forensic examination of my personality, given they were drawing from such a narrow source of information as we rarely spoke. I wanted to inform the relentless inquisitor my lack of charisma was because I'd been sick and was on the brink of breaking my all-time insomniac record, so I had little desire to spend time with my family, let alone some stranger. But my neighbour was pointing at me like Donald Sutherland's character at the end of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, their message clear: I was un-neighbourly. And unbeknownst to me, I'd been that way for years. While I have no urge to become the next Neighbourhood Watch captain, I've always tried to keep the small-scale interactions with people in my street blissfully simple. Wave. Nod. Smile. I felt this was being a dutiful fellow-dweller.

Perth needs good neighbours, but is a beer a bridge too far these days?
Perth needs good neighbours, but is a beer a bridge too far these days?

The Age

time16-07-2025

  • The Age

Perth needs good neighbours, but is a beer a bridge too far these days?

Given Gen Xers were raised wandering the plains of quarter-acre blocks in Perth like suburban hunters and gatherers, we were mostly spared the backyard battles that can erupt between neighbours. But as urban living becomes denser, friction can become more frequent: petty disputes over fences, trees or the unresolved murderous tension of someone butchering John Farnham songs until dawn. To some degree, such front-yard feuds are harmless and ingrained in suburbia. But I'm convinced the recent brouhaha in my street went beyond the norm. After I declined to have a beer with a nearby resident, the person unleashed a series of well-executed insults that made me rustle through my bedroom drawers looking for my old therapist's number. I was impressed by their forensic examination of my personality, given they were drawing from such a narrow source of information as we rarely spoke. I wanted to inform the relentless inquisitor my lack of charisma was because I'd been sick and was on the brink of breaking my all-time insomniac record, so I had little desire to spend time with my family, let alone some stranger. But my neighbour was pointing at me like Donald Sutherland's character at the end of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, their message clear: I was un-neighbourly. And unbeknownst to me, I'd been that way for years. While I have no urge to become the next Neighbourhood Watch captain, I've always tried to keep the small-scale interactions with people in my street blissfully simple. Wave. Nod. Smile. I felt this was being a dutiful fellow-dweller.

How to do it like a movie star
How to do it like a movie star

New Statesman​

time25-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New Statesman​

How to do it like a movie star

When I think of classic movie sex scenes, I reach for the obvious. Good: the languorous marital congress between Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie in Don't Look Now. Heinous: the 'butter scene' in Last Tango in Paris. Each tells us something about how sex works on film, reaching beyond the action on screen to the unconscious material we're picking up on. Despite the fact that Don't Look Now was filmed on a camera whirring as loud as 'a Singer sewing machine on methamphetamines' (Sutherland), everyone thought they were doing it for real because they were a couple in real life, and because the sex is stylishly intercut with footage of them dressing for dinner afterwards in a scene of affecting, mundane intimacy. Last Tango in Paris was developed from the sexual fantasies of its director, Bernardo Bertolucci. Its lead actress, Maria Schneider, had no idea that Marlon Brando was going to use a knob of butter in the simulated rape scene. The details weren't in her script – they'd been held back for a more 'realistic' reaction. Schneider's movie tears are real: she never fully recovered from the humiliation, and her protests over the years helped consign the film to the ick bucket. How many of us had ever thought about what's really going on in movie sex scenes? I know I hadn't. Game of Thrones started filming in 2010, and the actress Gemma Whelan (Yara Greyjoy) later described its copious rogering as a 'frenzied mess… They used to say, 'When we shout action, just go for it.'' Ita O'Brien, who'd come up through the world of movement and choreography in the drama schools of London, saw a gap in the market for an intimacy coordinator, paid to be on set to ensure that sex scenes 'deepen our understanding of characters', that actors and directors behave themselves and flesh-coloured garments remain in place. Just in time for the #MeToo movement, her work helped lift the veil on an area of cultural life that we see but don't see. Who came up with that move? The director? The co-star? Was the other actor OK with it? Could they say if they weren't? And why does that actor have no pubes? Was he told to shave them off? O'Brien has produced an exhaustive handbook of her work in the film industry which doubles up as a kind of intimacy manual for you and me. Once upon a time, movie sex scenes used to be our porn, but now we have actual porn for that. More now than ever, in our phone-filled life, the screen is a mirror, and in O'Brien's eyes the intimacy we see on screen can have a profound effect on 'real' experience. If sex is represented dishonestly, it makes us less honest and open with our partners, she says. Working as intimacy coordinator on Normal People and I May Destroy You, Gillian Anderson's Sex Education and Gentleman Jack, she has become known for sex scenes of a different nature: sex with periods, condoms, or with someone asking someone else if it hurts. All of this resonates with a younger audience raised on the alienating impossibility of pneumatic porn stars – the same generation, we hear year-on-year, who are having less and less sex. Sex gurus fascinate me: how did they end up there, making a living talking about something no one else can talk about? O'Brien is 60 and her biography is perfect: a childhood in rural Ireland, a Catholic girls' school – then dancing topless in a troupe in Asia. She endured regional panto where household-name comedians of the 1980s and 1990s would expect sexual servicing from their chorus girls, and her first TV job was on The Benny Hill Show, where she wore a Victorian dress with a hole cut at the cleavage in which Hill ('a very sweet man') stood his menu card. Now, a lifetime later, she resides in Kent, enjoying night-time stretching routines under the stars, and travelling the world spreading intimacy work in her tiny field of one or two. 'My expertise has led me to the point where I can walk out and help create a sex scene as a body dance where everyone feels safe and everyone feels empowered,' she says. Her long list of intimacy guidelines is now in place throughout the film industry, though some points remain ambiguous, such as the instruction that tongues should be avoided in kissing as standard practice 'unless the director feels it would serve the scene better to use tongues'. There is no dirt in this book, on O'Brien herself, or specific actors, or films. The most interesting story is that of Dakota Johnson, who starred in the Fifty Shades of Grey films and, these days, promotes a line of ungendered sex toys. But there are universal truths about sex and intimacy. 'In explicit sexual scenes, we nearly always see spontaneous penetration after perhaps 30 seconds of kissing. Is that how it happens in your life? No!' Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe She points out that intimacy is first and foremost about a relationship with oneself; that desire in long-term relationships is reactive rather than spontaneous, for men as well as women; that it's normal to feel like you can't be bothered. When she asserts that no real human is able to activate instant 'sex mode' at the end of a long day, I thought of couples in films who get back to the flat and slam each other into the wall. She believes that 'Tuesday sex' – her word for average weekday sex that isn't great and isn't crap either – is the stuff of life. 'It's the same when you go to see a play. Nine times out of ten you might just vaguely enjoy it – and then once in a while it will absolutely hit the spot.' There are surprising sketches of differently shaped organs, entire sections devoted to deep breathing and chakras, and a nine-step guide to walking barefoot in the garden (point seven: 'It is good to have tissues or a towel with you to clean your feet ready to put your socks and shoes back on.') But the urge to mock reflects the very problem she's trying to get to grips with – our embarrassment, our struggle to access a sensuous relationship with ourselves, to know what we want and then ask for it. It is largely unsexy to read about – just as Tuesday sex isn't something you'd actually want to watch. Or is it? Maybe one day it will be. O'Brien is evangelical about her work, foreseeing 'a utopia where society is shaped around communication and authentic connection'. She imagines a fundamental change in ethics as we teach actors to mirror the most empathic conversations about intimacy in their words and movements on screen. Yet I confess that all the way through this book I was muffling an adolescent snigger. If film stars get too good at this stuff – if every kiss is deeply workshopped and consensual, and every sex scene choreographed 'to build an increasing intensity of heat, so you can see the stages of a sexual encounter rather than an instant reaction', then there will be a whole new kind of chaos in the movie industry, and a whole new kind of film. [See also: Bridget Jones's hollow feminism] Related

Ralph Fiennes Is ‘Excited' To Play Donald Sutherland's Iconic Hunger Games Role
Ralph Fiennes Is ‘Excited' To Play Donald Sutherland's Iconic Hunger Games Role

News18

time21-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • News18

Ralph Fiennes Is ‘Excited' To Play Donald Sutherland's Iconic Hunger Games Role

Last Updated: Ralph Fiennes and Sutherland have worked together in the 2006 political satire Land of the Blind, directed by Robert Edwards. Ralph Fiennes, best known for playing Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter film series, is all set to step into the shoes of another iconic character. He has been roped in to play President Coriolanus Snow, a character made famous by the late Donald Sutherland in the original Hunger Games films, in the upcoming The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping. As expected, the 62-year-old actor is really excited to play the character, once essayed by Sutherland, who passed away in June 2024 at the age of 88. 'Obviously big shoes to sort of stand alongside of, but he brought wonderful complexity to that part, and I'm playing a slightly younger version of him," he told Entertainment Tonight, adding, 'I am challenged but excited. I'm looking forward to it." Fiennes also talked about working with the late actor, saying, 'I worked with Donald Sutherland once. I thought he was fantastic." The two stars worked in the 2006 film Land of the Blind. Directed by Robert Edwards, it was a political satire in which the duo hatch a plan to assassinate their country's leader. While speaking with The Hollywood Reporter at the London premiere of his film 28 Years Later on June 18, the Harry Potter actor said that he was really 'thrilled" to join the world of Hunger Games. Sharing his thoughts on portraying a younger version of Sutherland's character, Fiennes revealed, 'Look, I'm a Donald Sutherland fan," and added, 'I'm not going to try and be Donald Sutherland, because no one can be him. But I think the character he created is very complex… The complexity of that psychology, I hope I can echo in some way." Lionsgate's upcoming film, The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping, is based on a new book by Suzanne Collins and is set 24 years before Katniss Everdeen's time in the arena. The story will revolve around the Hunger Games of that time and will show the rise of a younger Snow to power. Fiennes will star alongside Whitney Peak, Mckenna Grace, Joseph Zada, Kelvin Harrison Jr., Maya Hawke, Jesse Plemons, Elle Fanning, Kieran Culkin, Lili Taylor, Molly McCann, Iona Bell, and Ben Wang. Directed by Francis Lawrence, Sunrise on the Reaping is set to hit theatres on November 20, 2026. First Published:

Ralph Fiennes is excited to play President Snow in upcoming 'Hunger Games' prequel: "I'm looking forward to it"
Ralph Fiennes is excited to play President Snow in upcoming 'Hunger Games' prequel: "I'm looking forward to it"

Time of India

time21-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Ralph Fiennes is excited to play President Snow in upcoming 'Hunger Games' prequel: "I'm looking forward to it"

Ralph Fiennes , the 'Conclave' actor, recently shared his excitement to play the younger version of President Coriolanus Snow, which was previously played by the late Donald Sutherland , in the upcoming prequel adaptation, 'The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping.' Ralph Fiennes as President Snow In an interview with Entertainment Tonight, the 62-year-old star said, 'I worked with Donald Sutherland once. I thought he was fantastic,' while he was with Jodie Costner for their new film, '28 Years Later.' 'Obviously big shoes to sort of stand alongside of, but he brought wonderful complexity to that part, and I'm playing a slightly younger version of him. I am challenged but excited. I'm looking forward to it,' Fiennes added. Previously, during the London Premiere of '28 Years Later,' Ralph said that he is 'really thrilled' to play the younger version of Southerland. He said that while he is a huge fan of the late actor, Ralph would not try and imitate him in any case. However, he desired that he could echo the character Southerland created. 'Look, I'm a Donald Sutherland fan. I'm not going to try and be Donald Sutherland, because no one can be him. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Free P2,000 GCash eGift UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo But I think the character he created is very complex… The complexity of that psychology, I hope I can echo in some way,' Finees stated, according to The Hollywood Reporter. About 'The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping.' The other star cast includes Joseph Zada, Whitney Peak, Mckenna Grace, Jesse Plemons , Kelvin Harrison Jr., Maya Hawke , Lili Taylor, Molly McCann, Iona Bell, Elle Fanning , Kieran Culkin and Ben Wang in the upcoming Hunger Games prequel which will be releasing on November 20, 2026, according to People. 'We wanted to honour Donald Sutherland by having one of this generation's greatest actors play President Snow 24 years before Katniss Everdeen entered the arena. Working with Ralph has been on my bucket list since he traumatised me for life in Schindler's List. It's genuinely a thrill to welcome him to the Hunger Games,' the producer, Nina Jacobson, said on May 16 about casting Ralph Fiennes as President Snow.

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