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Angie Dickinson is (almost) ready for TCM’s Film Festival

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Angie Dickinson is (almost) ready for TCM’s Film Festival

Angie Dickinson has fairly just a few tales about her star-making function in Howard Hawks’ “Rio Bravo,” that she is able to regale audiences with on the TCM Basic Movie Pageant on Thursday in Hollywood.

She was 27 when she performed Feathers, the quick-witted and strong-willed widow who stole scenes from the likes of John Wayne with traces like “Hey Sheriff, you forgot your pants.” And within the 64 years since “Rio Bravo” debuted, she has not bored with it within the least.

“I might watch it as soon as every week,” Dickinson stated from her residence in Los Angeles. “It’s a scrumptious film.”

However earlier than she sits all the way down to revisit one in every of her most treasured roles, the sharp, humorous 91-year-old cinema legend has one little drawback: She hasn’t but determined what to put on for her chat with TCM host Ben Mankiewicz.

“I might speak about ‘Rio Bravo’ eternally, however that’s not the issue,” she stated. “The issue is getting all carried out up and discovering a pleasant outfit for it. That’s not simple.”

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Dickinson counts getting forged as Feathers because the happiest second in her profession and “top-of-the-line recollections of my life.” Although she was intimidated to share the display screen with Wayne, a film star and her political reverse, they obtained alongside properly, and he put her comfy.

“He was so beneficiant. He would simply lean on that rifle and he by no means, ever confirmed any impatience,” she stated. “For all of the scenes, particularly the massive one the place I cry on the finish for him, he simply was as useful as he could possibly be by simply being affected person.”

Hawks was a special story, however she appreciated “most” of the expertise of working with him.

“He wasn’t a person of phrases,” she stated.

Her life didn’t change instantly when the movie got here out, nevertheless.

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“It got here out slightly quietly. Not a lot hoopla about it,” Dickinson stated. “I bear in mind one in every of my closest associates, she was type of a mentor and we performed poker each Saturday night time. She stated, ‘I noticed your movie.’ That was it. I feel she was not impressed. It’s like ‘thanks quite a bit.’ But it surely labored out OK. Due to tv it lives on.”

Dickinson retired from appearing over a decade in the past and hasn’t been tempted to come back again. She additionally stated nobody has been knocking at her door both.

“I couldn’t do these lengthy hours, you realize?” she stated. However she’s additionally leaving the door open for potentialities: “Now watch me take a film subsequent week.”

Mankiewicz, who has interviewed her many instances over time, loves speaking to Dickinson, who’s each filled with tales and admirably protecting of the folks she was near. She famously declined a writer’s request to write down a dishier memoir, however she’ll additionally nonetheless play the sport with a self-deprecating wink.

“Straight away you realize there’s authenticity to her. She’s simply herself in each manner,” Mankiewicz stated. “It’s very refreshing. You are feeling such as you’re having a dialog.”

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The “Rio Bravo” screening and dialogue marks the world premiere of a brand new 4K restoration of the movie, carried out in partnership with Martin Scorsese’s The Movie Basis and as a part of the one centesimal anniversary of Warner Bros. Steven Spielberg and Paul Thomas Anderson are additionally planning to take the stage as a part of the celebration.

Pola Changnon, TCM’s basic supervisor, stated that over the previous yr they labored alongside the Movie Basis and Warner Bros. to establish 10 titles within the studio’s huge library to both restore or improve to be proven on the competition.

Occasions on Friday alone embody a screening of “Dangerous Enterprise” with Rebecca De Mornay, “Groundhog Day” with Stephen Tobolowsky and “American Graffiti” with Sweet Clark and Richard Dreyfuss. Additionally on Friday, Steven Soderbergh will introduce his remake of “Ocean’s Eleven,” one of many movies programmed underneath the tantalizingly provocative class “Higher than the Authentic?” that’s positive to encourage debate amongst movie followers. On Saturday, William Friedkin will take part in a dialogue after a screening of “The Exorcist” on the TCL Chinese language IMAX, whereas poolside on the historic Roosevelt Lodge, Michael McKean and Annette O’Toole will speak about “A Mighty Wind.”

Different stars planning to attend the competition embody Ann-Margret (for “Bye Bye Birdie”), Shirley Jones (for “The Music Man”), Frankie Avalon (for “Seashore Occasion”) and Edward James Olmos (for “Stand and Ship”). Tributes are additionally being held for Oscar-winning manufacturing designer Patrizia von Brandenstein (“Amadeus”) and actor Russ Tamblyn (“Peyton Place”), whereas movie historian Donald Bogle, who put a highlight on Black artists working in cinema, is getting the Robert Osborne award.

The competition will shut Sunday with a full day of films, together with “The Massive Chill,” with Lawrence Kasdan, Tom Berenger and JoBeth Williams main a chat earlier than.

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“I say it yearly but it surely’s a humiliation of riches,” Changnon stated. “It’s 100 occasions throughout 4 days. I don’t assume there’s any expertise prefer it.”

For Mankiewicz, the actual deal with of the competition, is seeing TCM followers join with each other in individual.

“There’s no channel like us, the place folks’s identification is with the channel. Folks’s social media pages are like ‘lawyer, mom, spouse, TCM fan.’ Nobody says that about Showtime,” he laughed. “On the competition, it’s a neighborhood who desires to sit down round and speak about films. In the event you’re a film fan, I can’t think about how you can spend a greater 4 days.”

___

Observe AP Movie Author Lindsey Bahr: www.twitter.com/ldbahr.

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Trump's Proposed Tariffs on Canada Would Drive up Pump Prices, Analysts Warn

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Trump's Proposed Tariffs on Canada Would Drive up Pump Prices, Analysts Warn
By Shariq Khan and Nicole Jao NEW YORK (Reuters) – U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s pledge to impose tariffs on Canada would drive up fuel prices for Americans as it would upend decades-old oil trade from its top crude supplier, analysts said on Wednesday. Trump, who takes office on Jan. 20, said …
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Missing Canadian hiker found alive after spending weeks in blistering cold

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Missing Canadian hiker found alive after spending weeks in blistering cold

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A hiker who had been missing for more than six weeks was located in the Canadian wilderness earlier this week, according to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).

The Northern Rockies RCMP were notified on Tuesday at around 11:30 a.m. that Sam Benastick, 20, had been located. He had been reported missing by his family on Oct. 19.

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Benastick’s family became alarmed when he didn’t check in after embarking on a 10-day solo camping trip on Oct. 7 in harsh winter conditions, with temperatures plummeting below 4 degrees Fahrenheit.

SEARCH FOR MISSING OREGON HIKER AND HER DOGS SUSPENDED OVER ‘WEATHER CONDITIONS, LIKELIHOOD OF SURVIVABILITY’

Sam Benastick, 20, was located in the Canadian wilderness on Nov. 26 after he was reported missing by his family on Oct. 19. (GoFundMe)

Benastick was found when two people traveling to the Redfern Lake Trail for work saw him walking toward him. He was using walking sticks to support himself and was using a cut-up sleeping bag to keep his legs warm.

The men took Benastick to the hospital, where police confirmed him as the missing camper.

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He told police that he had stayed in his car for part of the time but then walked to a creek and the mountain side where he camped for 10 to 15 days. After that, he moved down the valley and built a camp and shelter in a dried-out creek bed before eventually flagging down the two men.

Sam Benastick’s family became alarmed when he didn’t check in after embarking on a 10-day solo camping trip on Oct. 7 in harsh winter conditions.

Sam Benastick’s family became alarmed when he didn’t check in after embarking on a 10-day solo camping trip on Oct. 7 in harsh winter conditions. (GoFundMe)

“Finding Sam alive is the absolute best outcome. After all the time he was missing, it was feared that this would not be the outcome,” said RCMP Cpl. Madonna Saunderson.

The agency went on to thank multiple jurisdictions that provided mutual aid support during the search, as well as the Canadian Rangers and volunteers with extensive backcountry knowledge of the area.

HIKER LOST FOR 10 DAYS FOUND ALIVE IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA MOUNTAINS

Canadian Flag

A view of the Canadian flag. (Chris Jackson/Getty Images)

“The time, effort and resources put in to locate Sam from the time of notification he was missing was beyond measure. We are thankful for the great outcome,” Saunderson said.

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A GoFundMe was set up by his sister following his disappearance to aid with expenses used to locate him.

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Borrell's final warning: EU has reached 'breaking point' in Ukraine

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Borrell's final warning: EU has reached 'breaking point' in Ukraine

In an interview before leaving office, Josep Borrell sounds the alarm about Russia’s military superiority in its war of aggression in Ukraine and urges EU countries to “do more and quicker” to support Ukraine. “We don’t have a sense of urgency.”

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As his five-year mandate as the European Union’s foreign policy chief comes to an end, Josep Borrell issues a final warning about the danger that Russia’s expansionism poses for the entire bloc and calls, one last time, on member states to ramp up their military assistance and prevent Ukraine from succumbing to Vladimir Putin’s control.

“We’ve reached the breaking point. Now it’s the moment when member states have to decide: we go and we support,” Borrell said in an interview with a group of media, including Euronews, two days before the end of his tenure.

“The Russians are pushing a lot. The Russians are not waiting for negotiations. Russia continues pushing slowly but continuously,” he went on. “The situation on the frontline is not good (but) the Ukrainians resist.”

Borrell’s comments come at a critical time in the war, with Russian troops making substantial territorial gains in the East and escalating their large-scale attacks against Ukraine’s energy system and civilian infrastructure. At the same time, an estimated 11,000 North Korean soldiers have joined the battle in the Kursk region, which Kyiv partially occupies and hopes to use as leverage in future talks.

“The Russian superiority continues. They have been provided by North Korea much more than we have been able to provide to the Ukrainians,” Borrell said as he directly challenged the belief that Moscow has become a pariah on the global stage.

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“I have to recognise: is Russia politically isolated? Certainly not. How many people went to Kazan?” he asked, referring to the BRICS summit in October that saw Putin host the likes of China’s Xi Jinping, India’s Narendra Modi, South Africa’s Cyril Ramaphose and, controversially, the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, among other guests.

“I can’t frankly say that Russia is becoming isolated in the international community.”

The High Representative, one of Kyiv’s staunchest supporters in the bloc, spent a great deal of his time in office haggling with governments over sanctions to weaken the Kremlin’s war machine and military supplies to strengthen Ukraine’s army.

While his efforts ensured a continued flow of assistance, the overall picture has fallen short of expectations: the EU achieved this month its much-touted target of providing Ukraine with one million rounds of ammunition – originally pencilled for the end of March. Meanwhile, a €6.6 billion fund in collective assistance is still under Hungary’s firm veto.

“This pace is completely insufficient,” Borrell lamented. “We have to speed up and do more and quicker. Do more and quicker. We’ve got 1 million rounds. Okay, that’s good. But Russia is shooting 800,000 rounds of ammunition per month. Figures matter.”

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‘No sense of urgency’

Having a brutal war raging at its doorstep has forced the EU to reinvent its defence policy, long ignored under the mirage of peaceful times. Defence spending has drastically increased until reaching €326 billion in 2024, an unprecedented 1.9% of the bloc’s GDP, according to the latest report of the Europea Defence Agency.

But there is a growing awareness that much more needs to be done to prepare for the post-war reality of an emboldened Russia. One of the ideas that has gained traction, and which was recently endorsed by Germany, France, Italy, Spain and Poland, is the issuance of joint debt, or Eurobonds, to boost the bloc’s defence industry.

Although not opposed in principle, Borrell believes this project is not adequate to respond to the invasion because it would only yield results sometime in the future.

“There is something that in Europe we miss very often, which is a time dimension of things,” Borrell said. “If you have to wait to issue debt to collect the money and develop the industrial capacity to produce, (then) it’s too late, my friend. It’s too late. If you have to substitute the military capability of the US, it’s not by issuing bonds, collecting the money, investing and producing. That’s for the next war. For this war, you have to mobilise what you have. Because time matters.”

When EU leaders decided in 2020 to establish a €750-billion recovery fund backed by joint debt, it took Brussels several months to obtain legal consent from the 27 capitals and have the plan up and running. By the time payments began, most countries were already out of COVID lockdowns and enjoying a healthy economic recovery.

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“If Russia breaks the front in the next spring, they will not wait for you to issue bonds,” Borrell said. “By the way, how long does it take to issue bonds? I don’t know, but past experience shows that it’s quite slow.”

The war in Ukraine is a “race against time,” he underlined, meaning the financial thinking that was applied to the pandemic cannot be copy-pasted as a solution now.

“Use what you have today, use the tools and the instruments that have been invented in the past to be used in the present,” Borrell said.

We spend too much time designing the strategies for the day after tomorrow when the problem is for today and (it’s) immediate. We don’t have a sense of urgency.”

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‘Don’t pretend it’s for free’

An external factor that might help the EU gain the sense of urgency that Borrell regrets is lacking is the upcoming return of Donald Trump to the White House.

The Republican has promised to heavily revise aid to Ukraine and strike a deal to end the war “in 24 hours,” without providing specific details. Should America, a world-class producer of high-tech weapons, withdraw from the West’s common front, Europe will be essentially left alone in supporting the war-torn nation.

“Are we able to supply arms to Ukraine in order to substitute the US engagement? No. Can you realistically say yes?” Borrell said during the interview.

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“In three months or two months, things may change a lot in the front line and they (Ukrainians) are not sitting and waiting for Trump to come and decide something.”

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To avoid a last-minute scramble to fill America’s vacuum, Borrell urges member states to replenish their military stock, donate as much as possible now and lift all restrictions on the use of weapons so that Ukraine could strike targets deep into Russian territory. US President Joe Biden has already dropped his veto but German Chancellor Olaf Scholz remains categorically opposed to delivering long-range Taurus missiles.

“Now we have to restock because these stocks ended. No more stocks. So that’s the question. We survived and Ukraine survived thanks to the fact that the former Soviet Union countries have stocks of arms that the Ukrainians knew how to work,” Borrell said, referring to the first months of the war.

“Until the last minute of my mandate, I’m going to continue recommending member states what I have been saying for months: do more and quicker,” he added.

“If there’s a cut on the supply lines, these people cannot fight. And this is my concern. This has to arrive every day. If there are stockpiles, they have to be sent by train, by plane. They have to arrive. They have to be paid.”

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The chief diplomat, however, admitted backing Kyiv requires not just the endorsement of presidents and prime ministers but also the buy-in of ordinary citizens, who might be wondering why their taxes should be spent in a distant nation. Communication, he said, is fundamental to helping people understand the threat that Europe also faces.

“In order to continue supporting Ukraine as much as needed, which is much more than until now, members have to win the battle of internal politics because we live in democratic countries. And the governments need the support of the population in order to continue spending money for Ukraine,” he said.

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“We have to have the support of the people, and we have to tell them the truth: it’s not for free. Our war cost money and cost lives. And thankfully, it’s not our lives, but it’s our money. Don’t pretend this to be for free,” he went on.

“Someone has to explain to the public opinion in the public debate what is at stake. And I think we are not doing enough. And we try to hide the cost. Don’t hide the cost. Be honest with the people. This has a cost.”

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