Friday 17 January 2014

Breaking News: Supreme Court Orders Abacha Son’s Trial for Theft

The Supreme Court has unanimously decided in the morning of January 17, 2014, Friday that Mohammed Abacha, son of the late former Head of State, General Sani Abacha, must be returned to an Abuja High Court and face his trial.

Capture
A 123 count criminal charges have been brought against him by the Federal Government of Nigeria, wherein he was alleged to be in possession of stolen properties belonging to the Federal Government.
The theft was allegedly committed by the late former dictator stole, when he ruled Nigeria.
Mohammed Abacha had previously unsuccessfully attempted to foil his trial. Then he proceeded to the Court of Appeal, where he lost. Finally, he approached the Supreme Court.
The son of the late ruler declared that the immunity enjoyed by his father, while in office, extended to him and that having forfeited some of the family’s properties confiscated by the government, he should be exempted from prosecution in line with the he provisions of Decree number 53 of 1999.
The Court, however, stated that immunity does not extend beyond the tenure of office and that even if the late head of state were alive, he could have been prosecuted for a criminal offence, not to talk of his son, who has never been a State Leader.
Therefore, Mohammed Abacha  has to go and face his trial at the Abuja court

New photos of Kim K and Kanye West's daughter, North West

She's beginning to look so much like her dad. She's so cute. Kim K shared the new pics on The Ellen DeGeneres show and said she and Kanye are planning a summer wedding that will not hold in the US

Princess Dammy opens up on collapsed marriage, blames some of it on bloggers

In December 2013, comedienne Princess publicly announced the end of her 7-months marriage. In a new interview with Encomium mag, princess broke her silence on the collapsed marriage and said the press, especially bloggers wanted her marriage to collapse. Excerpts below...
There were some allegations that you were oppressing him financially. They cited an example of both of you in a restaurant where you made it obvious to everyone present that you were the one paying for what the two of you had eaten?
They were there abi? People can say anything. It doesn't matter. The truth is the truth. I did not discuss my marriage breakup with anybody except what I just told you. I am a celebrity, the other person is not a celebrity, so what do you expect? Any person can just sit down and start writing what you just told me without even knowing me. If Kanye West was dating a non celebrity and not Kim Kardashian, they will say the same thing. So if I wanted to make the reason public, I would have made it myself. But it is not necessary, marriage is between a couple. We did not take our marriage vow on the street. We took it before God. Me, I am not afraid of man. I am also afraid of God. Anything that happened between God and a couple is sacred. There is no need itemizing the reasons. What is that going to do? Is it going to make the other party happy? Is it going to make us happy? So it is between the person (husband), I and God.
Really I dont owe anybody the reason why my marriage broke up but they can sit down and start drawing up reasons for themselves. That is their problem. They have God to answer to. The most authentic news is the one you get from the source. I didn't want people to be speculating because I was already hearing many rumors, bla bla bla, even when we were still together trying to make it work. They kept on writing what they were not sure of. I remember there were times he would ping to say he see what they wrote again.
The press, particularly the so-called bloggers, many of whom are not credible kept on writing things that were not happening at all. That is why I said now that the marriage has crashed, I hope they are now happy.
I know few press men who are true to their professional ethics would not be happy with it (breakup) but the other ones that are not true to their professional ethics are the ones writing things that do not exist. But they are not God and cannot be more than God

New York Film Critics Circle Awards: ‘American Hustle’ Best Film; Robert Redford, Cate Blanchett Top Actor Honors


NYFCC200x200111019173230UPDATED WITH ALL WINNERS: The New York Film Critics Circle has voted David O Russell’s ensemble crime drama American Hustle as its film of the year, one of three awards bestowed today on the Sony/Columbia film by the critics group. The pic is set for a December 13 release. The NYFCC  also picked Robert Redford as american_hustle_ver6_xlgBest Actor for his stand-alone role in JC Chandor’s All Is Lost and Cate Blanchett as Best Actress for Woody Allen’s Blue Jasmine, while Steve McQueen was named Best Director for 12 Years A SlaveAmerican Hustle, which stars Christian Bale, Bradley Cooper, Amy Adams, Jeremey Renner and Jennifer Lawrence, also won for Lawrence as Supporting Actress and for Russell and Eric Singer’s screenplay. Last year, the NYFCC tapped Zero Dark Thirty for Best Film and helmer Kathryn Bigelow for Best Director, starting that pic’s path to a Best Picture Oscar nomination.
The NYFCC is one of the earliest groups to vote on the year’s best performances in film, kicking off a slew of critics organizations whose results can serve as if not Oscar predictors then maybe Oscar leaners. Like last year, this year’s NYFCC vote from its membership of NY critics from daily and weekly newspapers, magazines and online publications comes one day before the National Board of Review makes its picks. Here are the final results of today’s voting:
Best Film
American Hustle
Best Actor
Robert Redford, All Is Lost
Best Actress
Cate Blanchett, Blue Jasmine
Best Director
Steve McQueen, 12 Years A Slave
Best Supporting Actress
Jennifer Lawrence, American Hustle
Best Foreign Language Film
Blue Is The Warmest Color
Best Supporting Actor
Jared Leto, Dallas Buyers Club
Best Animated Film
The Wind Rises
Best Screenplay
American Hustle
Special Award
Frederick Wiseman
Best Cinematography
Bruno Delbonnel, Inside Llewyn Davis
Best First Film
Fruitvale Station
Best Non-fiction Film (Documentary)
Stories We Tell

OSCARS: Foreign Language Film Nominations Shut Out Wong Kar Wai – Again

Oscar Foreign Film NominationsWhat does Wong Kar Wai have to do to get an Oscar nomination? The veteran Hong Kong filmmaker was shut out of the Foreign Language Oscar category today after reaching the shortlist for the first time with The Grandmaster. His only other shot at an Oscar came in 2000 when his haunting period love story, In The Mood For Love, was the submission from his home country. It did not advance. To be fair, Grandmaster did pick up two nods today, one for Phillipe Le Sourd’s cinematography and one for William Chang Suk Ping’s costume design. But the Academy chose to forgo the Martin Scorsese-endorsed film in a race in which it was widely expected to figure. WKW on Grandmaster set


Indeed, people I talked to today were very surprised. When I recently spoke with Harvey Weinstein, whose Weinstein Co has the movie in several countries, I wondered if The Grandmaster‘s box office could be an issue since it was the highest-grossing film of all the contenders, and since commercial movies aren’t normally the ones the Academy sidles up to in this category. It’s familiar territory for Weinstein who was on the shortlist with French juggernaut The Intouchables last year. That film did not make the jump to a nomination and Weinstein told me in December that it had been a victim of its own success. One watcher today suggested Grandmaster may have suffered a similar fate. There was also a spot of controversy over the Chinese version being cut down for the U.S. – although the U.S. version is the same as the one submitted by Hong Kong. Weinstein told me last month that the adjustments were made to avoid confusion over some cultural elements and that Wong did them himself, rather than Weinstein and exec producer Megan Ellison as had been suggested. “People think it was us,” Weinstein said, adding, “As presumptuous as I can be, I’m not presumptuous enough to tell Kar Wai” what to do.
missing pictureLooking at the films that did get nominated, the make-up of the Foreign Language category is pretty spot-on in terms of expectations. The one finalist that might surprise is Rithy Panh’s documentary The Missing Picture. The autobiographical story — told entirely with clay figures — documents the Cambodian director’s experiences growing up under the Khmer Rouge. It won the top prize in the Cannes Film Festival’s Un Certain Regard section last year, but has not had quite as high a profile as the other nominees and shortlisted pics. Strand Releasing has it in the U.S. where it has played several festivals. One exec says, “It’s nominations like that that give you hope for Academy voters.”
OMARANNONCE_1309140009Also making the cut is Hany Abu-Assad’s Omar. The Palestinian film brings the director back to the party for a second time. That’s especially notable because Palestine has made Foreign Language submissions only six times and the two times a movie by Abu-Assad was chosen, it’s gone on to a nomination. In fact, Abu-Assad is the only director in the final five to have ever scored a nomination before. (He told me today that he decided to sleep through the nominations but his girlfriend secretly got up and watched them on mute before waking him with the good news. “I’m surprised and happy,” he said, sounding shocked.) Omar, about young Palestinian baker (Adam Bakri) whose loyalty to family and country are complicated by his love for a beautiful young student, mixes elements of Shakespearean tragedy with suspense thriller and international intrigue. Adopt Films, which is thrilled with its first nomination since the company was created 2.5 years ago, has the movie in the U.S. and will open it February 21.
the huntThe titles that had been on most people’s lips and which made it to the next stage are Thomas Vinterberg’s The Hunt out of Denmark; Paolo Sorrentino’s The Great Beauty from Italy; and Belgium’s The Broken Circle Breakdown by Felix van Groeningen. Each has their own particularity and their own level of momentum. Hunt, which has been around since it won the Best Actor prize for Mads Mikkelsen in Cannes in 2012, also just scooped a Best Actor nod at the Palm Springs International Film Festival. It’s got six Bodil nominations at home where it was the second-highest-grossing film of 2013. Mikkelsen plays a man whose life is shattered when an untruthful remark throws his small community into a collective state of hysteria. In the U.S., it was great beautyreleased by Magnolia in July. It was also nominated for a Golden Globe but lost to its Oscar competitor Great Beauty. That film has a slew of other prizes under its belt including European Film Awards for Best Film, Director and Actor (Toni Servillo). The story of an aging writer recollecting his lost youth that’s a sort of love letter to Rome was released by Janus Films in the U.S. in November.
Finally, broken circleBroken Circle Breakdown, a Berlin debut in 2013, was just handed the FIPRESCI Prize for Best Foreign Language film at Palm Springs. Van Groeningen’s movie is the story of a couple that is deeply in love, but when unexpected tragedy befalls their new family, they are severely tested. And, it’s all set to a backdrop of American Bluegrass music. Tribeca Film released it in November in the U.S. The director told me today he went jogging instead of watching the nominations live stream. When he got home, he took a shower before looking at his emails and understanding his film had grabbed one of the five slots. “It took some time to sink in; I didn’t do anything for five minutes, then I cried for about 20 seconds, then I drove to Brussels for a press conference because Belgium is going kind of crazy right now,” he said.