Entertainment
Concord Video Review – IGN
Concord reviewed by Travis Northup on PC and PlayStation 5.
Concord isn’t the most innovative or content-heavy hero shooter you could play, but with such fantastic competitive gameplay, 16 compelling characters to master, and 12 well-designed maps, it’s got the makings of something that could go the distance in the months and years to come. In fact, it’s a testament to its FPS chops that even while it has a virtually nonexistent story and a serious need for a signature game mode, I still found myself losing dozens of hours to its PvP charms. Hopefully the live-service roadmap will do its thing and show this promising shooter the love it needs to become something truly special, but right now it’s at least good enough for me to recommend trying out.
TV
Strictly Come Dancing enters a new era of chaperones and welfare measures – this year’s stars discuss all
The BBC’s ballroom behemoth, Strictly Come Dancing, has been catapulted into a new era. The show has completed 20 laps around the sun as Britain’s loveliest comfort watch, delivering high kicks, glittery outfits and tears of joy for two glorious decades. Each year, the show combines old-fashioned showbiz glamour with classic British silliness. It’s given us Ed Balls grinding to“Gangnam Style”. Russell Grant being shot out of a cannon. Ann Widdecombe getting dragged across the dancefloor like a broken suitcase. And there have been trailblazing moments – take the show’s first deaf contestant, Rose Ayling-Ellis, and her Bafta-winning silent dance. Now, though, the show’s wholesomeness has been tarnished by accusations of bullying and abusive behaviour, forcing the BBC to apologise and fire two professional dancers from the cast. It’s left us all wondering: how will the show go on?
In response to the scandals surrounding Giovanni Pernice and Graziano di Prima, the BBC has introduced a set of duty-of-care measures ahead of the new series. Chaperones will now be present in rehearsal rooms, while two welfare specialists have joined the production team, with the rest of the crew receiving extra training. Though most of us watching at home will never be privy to the inner workings of the new system, this year’s batch of 15 celebrities shed some light on the changes when I meet with them at the Strictly studios a couple of weeks ahead of opening night. They’ve already been in training for the launch show. Among them is former X Factor singer Shayne Ward, sitting across from me at a round table decorated with a giant glitterball centrepiece.
So far, he says, the chaperones have been very discreet. “You can’t see them when you’re dancing but they’re always there,” he says, holding his purple Strictly-branded water bottle. “If you’ve got something on your mind or you just wanna have a chat – you have somebody there for a little bit of support. But they’re not gonna be completely on your shoulder,” he says.
All of the celebrities I speak to have a positive expectation about what’s to come. “Everything’s in place both mentally and physically to look after you,” says DIY SOS‘s Nick Knowles. We’ve got physios to make sure we’re physically OK. We’ve got people to talk to if you feel bad,” he explains. “People are being listened to. From our [the celebrities’] point of view, it just feels great.” I get the sense that these are pre-planned responses, but the celebrities do seem genuinely enthused about their experience so far.
EastEnders actor Jamie Borthwick, who is returning to Strictly after winning the Christmas show with Nancy Xu in December, suggests the vibe feels more serious now he’s doing the real thing. “I was only here for two weeks [for the Christmas show] and it was very fun and festive and you know, it wasn’t as… heightened as the main show,” he pauses. “It’s a bit more different now, working with different people, but it’s the same gang all still here and everyone’s still great.” He says the backstage passion for the show, which he witnessed back at Christmas, hasn’t waned despite the allegations that emerged over the summer. “Everyone’s so enthusiastic. Everyone wants to be here and have fun,” he says.
There’s no denying that the standard of dancing on Strictly has spiked in recent years. When watching a semi-final these days, it’s easy to mistake an amateur for a professional (if you squint a little bit). And while judges would only award 10s on very special occasions a decade ago, in the latest series the celebrities were so skilled that the panel couldn’t resist routinely dishing out full marks.
Did this year’s celebrities feel pressure to meet those high standards? Knowles says he has undergone a six-week fitness regime but admits he is struggling with rehearsals. The day before we speak, he left a dancing session and barely had the energy to walk to the car. “I got home and basically ran a bath of cold water and put my feet in,” he laughs. “I’m just staring at the tiles on the wall. I’m just like a zombie staring into space!” He says that the show is completely occupying his mind. “My brain is entirely on what we’re doing and how to try to not look like someone’s uncle at a wedding.” Miranda star Sarah Hadland says she panic-called her ex-personal trainer when the BBC contacted her. “I hadn’t trained in three years and I literally rang the last person I was with like, ‘You’ve got to help me! I’m going on Strictly!’ And he was like, ‘I’ve moved to Yorkshire!’ So we’ve been training on FaceTime.”
Comedian Chris McCausland laughs when he says he could feel himself “seizing up” after rehearsals last night. “I went to pick something up off the floor and I gave up halfway and just left it. It’s really full on for the start of it.” McCausland, who will be the show’s first blind contestant, says the production team have been excellent in accommodating him. “I’ve never seen the show, and I can’t go back and watch it, so we’re gonna have to figure it out as we go along,” he explains. “The production crew are being really flexible. My dance partner is figuring out how to teach me and we’re winging it… that’s the best way.”
The ever-climbing standards, combined with the news of the allegations, certainly made some incoming contestants think more deeply about their answer when they got the call from the BBC. Punk rock singer Toyah Willcox says the recent events made her consider her own physical endurance. “[The accusations] have made me take what’s coming very seriously,” she says. “What’s happened this year is because everyone is 100 per cent committed to dancing. And I’ve been thinking, can I push myself beyond my own limitations? You’ve got to go beyond your own personal comfort zone and that’s always been very, very obvious. For me, it’s now or never. It’s as simple as that.”
Former Arsenal/England footballer Paul Merson says his former teammate Tony Adams forewarned him about the physical extremity of the commitment he was about to make. “Tony didn’t have a good reaction [when I told him I signed up],” says Merson. “He said it’s the hardest thing he’s ever done. He said, ‘One week you’re learning chess. Then it’s rip that up. Next week, you’re learning how to play backgammon.’ He was England captain, played in front of 100,000, and he said, ‘I never ever felt like I did before every live show, my mouth was dry.’”
Already, the celebrities seem to be sizing each other up. Merson says he’s eyed the celebrities with a natural flair for dancing. “When I got there yesterday, a group of the celebs were doing their dancing and I was blown away,” he gasps. “I was literally sitting there like, ‘I thought everybody was going to be s***.’ Honestly, I’ve never seen anything like it. Some of the celebrities are mind-blowing.” Oh, go on. Tell us who. He points to Love Island star Tasha Ghouri, who is a trained commercial dancer. “And Shayne. Shayne’s good!” he says. Elsewhere, opera singer Wynne Evans teases Borthwick for having an “extra six months” advantage because he’s already done the Christmas special. “It’s like he’s been in training a lot longer than the rest of us. I can’t let it go!” he jokes. “You’re not gonna let it go!” replies Borthwick.
The celebrities are clearly buzzing from rehearsing their opening number. But, right now, it’s baby steps – they’re still laying down the foundations. Hadland tells me about practicing walking down the iconic Strictly stairs, which happens at the beginning of every show as the voice of Alan Dedicoat announces the participants’ names. “That was definitely a bit of an out of body experience,” giggles Hadland. “You hear, ‘Da da da, here’s Sarah Hadland!’ And you’re like ‘Oh my God, it’s actually happening.’” Montell Douglas, aka Fire from the recent Gladiators reboot, says she’s been haunted by the show’s logo since rehearsals began. “All I’m seeing is glitterballs everywhere,” she laughs, pointing at the shimmering orb between us. “I’m having nightmares about glitterballs already. Dreams that are turning into nightmares. It’s definitely making me shiny-eyed, that’s for sure.”
Perhaps Strictly’s sparkle will remain intact, after all.
‘Strictly Come Dancing’ continues on BBC One on Saturday 21 September
Entertainment
Alien: Romulus Video Review – IGN
Alien: Romulus reviewed by Tom Jorgensen. In theaters August 16, 2024.
Evoking the genetic f***ery that always spells doom in these movies, Alien: Romulus is a lean, mean, chimeric beauty. Fede Álvarez proves that his Evil Dead remake was no fluke: The director seamlessly keys into the narrative and aesthetic touchstones of the series and marshals them to breathtaking ends. Romulus occasionally takes a turn down a dead end hall pace-wise – and unfortunately its most audacious bridge to the franchise’s past is extremely rickety – but those missteps are forgivable considering how confidently and judiciously Álvarez handles them elsewhere. Helped along by a talented ensemble of young actors and reference-quality production design, Alien: Romulus’s back-to-basics approach to blockbuster horror boils everything fans love about the tonally-fluid franchise into one film, and it’s one that you’re going to need to start making time for the next time you plan on marathoning Alien and Aliens.
TV
Tom 🍓 Jerry (Ram Navami Special)Real End Twist😍🎈 #shorts #viral #v5familyshow
Tom 🍓 Jerry (Ram Navami Special)Real End Twist😍🎈 #shorts #viral #v5familyshow
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Entertainment
Alec Baldwin urges judge to stand by dismissal of involuntary manslaughter case in 2021 “Rust” shooting
Alec Baldwin urged a New Mexico judge on Friday to stand by her decision to skuttle his trial and dismiss an involuntary manslaughter charge against the actor in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer on the set of a Western movie.
State District Court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer dismissed the case against Baldwin halfway through a trial in July based on the withholding of evidence by police and prosecutors from the defense in the 2021 shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of the film “Rust.”
The charge against Baldwin was dismissed with prejudice, meaning it can’t be revived once any appeals of the decision are exhausted.
Special prosecutor Kari Morrissey recently asked the judge to reconsider, arguing that there were insufficient facts and that Baldwin’s due process rights had not been violated.
Baldwin, co-producer and lead actor in the film “Rust,” was pointing a revolver at Hutchins during a rehearsal in a small church on the movie set at Bonanza Creek Ranch when the gun went off, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza. Baldwin has said he pulled back the hammer — but not the trigger — and the gun fired.
The case-ending evidence was ammunition that was brought into the sheriff’s office in March by a man who said it could be related to Hutchins’ killing. Prosecutors said they deemed the ammunition unrelated and unimportant, while Baldwin’s lawyers alleged that they “buried” it and filed a successful motion to dismiss the case.
In her decision to dismiss the Baldwin case, Marlowe Sommer described “egregious discovery violations constituting misconduct” by law enforcement and prosecutors, as well as false testimony about physical evidence by a witness during the trial.
Defense counsel says that prosecutors tried to establish a link between the live ammo on set and Gutierrez-Reed, to drive home the argument that Baldwin should have recognized the armorer’s blundering youth and inexperience.
“Baldwin was intitled to pursue the truth at trial, especially after he requested to see ‘all rounds, casings and deconstructed rounds’ in the state’s possession,” the new court filing by defense attorneys states. “Yet the state deliberately withheld the evidence that Baldwin had requested.”
“Rust” movie armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed is serving an 18-month sentence on a conviction for involuntary manslaughter. She was accused of flouting standard safety protocols and missing multiple opportunities to detect forbidden live ammunition on set.
Assistant director and safety coordinator David Halls pleaded no contest to the negligent use of a deadly weapon and was sentenced to six months of unsupervised probation. A no contest plea isn’t an admission of guilt but is treated as such for sentencing purposes.
TV
Strictly Come Dancing 2024: All of the celebrity contestants with previous dance experience
Strictly Come Dancing is almost back on our screens and fans are once again putting on their detective hats to find out which celebrities have an “advantage” due to past dance training.
As many of the celebrities competing on Strictly are actors, singers and performers, a large number of them will have trained in dance or theatrical performance.
Those contestants are often subject to backlash from viewers at home who argue that they have an unfair advantage compared to the other contestants. There is also criticism that the inclusion of these celebrities means that the amateur dancing show has become more competitive in recent years. Last year, Layton Williams faced similar complaints from viewers who claimed he had an unfair advantage due to his dance experience performing in West End productions.
This year’s lineup includes a professionally trained commercial dancer, a JLS member and a musician with West End performance experience. Find out who they are, and what they’ve said about their training, below.
Tasha Ghouri
Before she became a finalist on the 2022 season of Love Island, 26-year-old Ghouri trained as a dancer at Creative Academy in Slough and has since competed at major dance events. She specialises in commercial, which is a broader style of dance popularly seen in music videos or on stage at music tours.
Speaking to The Independent and other journalists at a roundtable event ahead of the new series, Ghouri explained that the ballroom technique is completely different to the training she received at dance school.
“Commercial dance is very different to ballroom dance and latin, I’m still having to strip down and relearn, even walking in cha cha step is weird to me – you have to turn out your feet and lead with your hips, so it’s based on muscle memory.”
“Even letting a man take the lead is a lot.”
Speaking about whether she is anticipating backlash due to her previous training, Ghouri said that she signed up for the show to make her family proud, and is looking forward to a positive experience.
“I’ve gotta block out that noise and luckily I’ve been in this industry for two years and I’ve grown so much stronger after Love Island – there was so much negativity,” she said. “[Strictly] is my dream. It’s something I’ve dreamt of for so long. So I’m doing this for me and my family and my partner.”
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JB Gill
Gill, who rose to fame in 2008 with his boyband JLS, has a wealth of dancing experience from starring in the band’s music videos and performing dance routines on tour.
The “One Shot” singer has already had a taste of Strictly: he took home the trophy on the 2012 Christmas show, performing a jive to “Rockin’ Robin” alongside professional dancer Ola Jordan.
Speaking ahead of this year’s show, Gill explained that he had just finished touring with JLS, so that he was already feeling physically ready for the show.
“I’ve literally just come off a summer tour with all of the boys, so I’m probably in the best shape that I possibly could be,” he told The Independent. “Physically I feel like I’m in a decent space, but as soon as we start doing all the frames and all this stuff, I think the muscles are really gonna hurt. So I’m preparing myself.”
Jamie Borthwick
EastEnders actor Borthwick is already well-prepared for this year’s Strictly after winning the 2023 Christmas special alongside professional dancer Nancy Xu.
The couple performed the Quickstep and achieved a maximum of 40 points from the judges.
Borthwick attended the Sylvia Young Theatre School, which trains students in singing, acting and dancing. Daniel Kaluuya, Dua Lipa and Amy Winehouse are all alumni.
Speaking to The Independent, Borthwick remarked that it had only been a matter of six months between his two Strictly stints: “It’s like I never left because what’s six months anyway?” he said.
Toyah Willcox
Willcox, best known for hit singles like “It’s A Mystery”, “I Want to Be Free” and “Brave New World”, has a career spanning more than 40 years across stage and screen.
The singer rose to fame in the late Seventies when she fronted the band Toyah, before pursuing a solo career in the mid-Eighties. But she has completed several stints as a character actor in West End shows, and has been privy to some performance and dance experience.
Throughout her career, she has acted, sung and danced in more than 40 stage shows and acted in more than 20 feature films.
Speaking to The Independent about her performance experience, she said: “I’ve done West End shows. But I’m a character actress, not a dancer, and I will give anything a go. This is such a different art form. We’ve got to turn our feet out. We’ve got to twist our backs. We’ll be doing things that I would never choose to do in a West End show. It’s going to be very challenging, I think for all of us.”
Entertainment
Black Myth: Wukong PC Video Review
Black Myth: Wukong is an ambitious and oftentimes jawdropping action game that both delighted with its excellent combat and fantastic boss battles, and frustrated due its puzzling lack of a map and technical issues.
Black Myth: Wukong reviewed by Mitchell Saltzman on PC. Also available on PlayStation 5.
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