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Cat tale 'Flow' goes from underdog to Oscar nominee

By - Mar 01,2025 - Last updated at Mar 01,2025

The Golden Globe award (left) for the animated movie ‘Flow’ directed by Latvian film director Gints Zilbalodis is on display at the Latvian National Museum of Art in Riga, Latvia, on January 30 (AFP photo)

LONDON — The international success of "Flow", an animated Latvian film about a cat's quest to escape rising waters, has taken its director by surprise.

"Flow" has no dialogue and Gints Zilbalodis, who had a budget of $3.6 million, beat off giant animation studios to win a Golden Globe and now has two Oscar nominations.

 

"We thought the best case scenario would be that we would be selected in some of the festivals and have a nice festival run," Zilbalodis told AFP.

The 30-year-old sat down for an interview in London -- one of multiple stops on a whirlwind global tour -- ahead of the Academy Awards on Sunday.

"Flow" stands a double chance of winning as it is shortlisted in the best animated feature and the international film categories.

 

The film tells the story of a black cat who discovers that people have deserted their dwelling and that water is approaching the nearby meadows.

Confronted with a flood, the feline protagonist reluctantly boards a sailboat in the company of animals including a buoyant golden retriever and an unruffled capybara.

"Zilbalodis largely avoids the sort of whimsy and sentimentality that might plague, say, a Disney movie with the same premise," said the New York Times review which typifies reaction around the world.

"The animals act like real animals, not like cartoons or humans, and that restraint gives their adventure an authenticity that, in moments of both delight and peril, makes the emotion that much more powerful," it added.

 

For Latvia, the nominations are historic: no film from this Baltic country of 1.8 million people has ever contended for an Oscar.

The international recognition has triggered "Flow-mania" at home.

 

Film-themed street art is appearing around Riga while Latvians have queued to take selfies with the Golden Globe trophy which has been put on display in the national museum.

 

More than 320,000 people saw "Flow" in Latvian cinemas, the country's film centre told AFP, making it the most-viewed film in Latvian history, surpassing "Avatar" and "Titanic".

 

'Story of my experience' 

 

"Maybe we're just in the right place at the right time," Zilbalodis said modestly.

But he has a theory about why the film has won over audiences and critics.

It is about "people embracing different types of films, and not just watching the big franchises".

The film's seemingly simple plot carries deeper meaning for Zilbalodis.

 

"This is a story about a character who starts out being very independent, and then has to learn how to trust others and how to collaborate," he said.

"It's kind of a story of my experience," added Zilbalodis, who made his first feature animation, "Away", on his own. He said the process of creating "Flow" was also one of adapting to teamwork.

The team chose to focus on animals and mimic their real-life behaviour, a decision that led them to watch cat videos online and take trips to the zoo as part of their research.

 

Capybara tickling 

 

Zilbalodis also opted for using the animals' natural sounds, which created an unexpected dilemma.

 

"We recorded real cats and dogs and everything, and that worked pretty well. But the only character that kind of needed some extra assistance was the capybara," an imperturbable member of the cat's crew.

The film's sound designer tried to record it in a zoo -- but discovered capybaras are normally silent.

"A zookeeper had to actually go in and tickle the capybara," Zilbalodis recounted, "which is a very nice job," he added, chuckling.

 

The result was, however, a high-pitched sound that the "Flow" team judged incompatible with the laid-back capybara.

 

"After some searching, we settled on a voice of a baby camel."

 

For Zilbalodis, making unexpected adjustments and testing different solutions for the film was one of the advantages of working in a small, independent studio

"If you're doing something huge, it's like changing course of a very big ship, which can be very slow and expensive," Zilbalodis said.

His next film will have human characters and, crucially, dialogue -- a first for him.

"But what is important is that we stay working independently, and I want to continue working in our studio in Latvia," he stressed.

Hollywood giant Gene Hackman, wife found dead in 'suspicious' circumstances

By - Feb 27,2025 - Last updated at Feb 27,2025

US actor Gene Hackman (centre) is accompanied by fellow actors Robin Williams (left) and Michael Caine after he was honoured with the Cecile B. DeMille Award at the 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards, 19 January 2003, in Beverly Hills, CA (AFP photo)

LOS ANGELES, United States — Oscar-winning cinema giant Gene Hackman was found dead on Wednesday alongside his wife, in an incident that police are reportedly calling "suspicious."

Hackman, 95, and his classical pianist wife Betsy Arakawa, 63, died at their home in New Mexico along with their dog.

Authorities initially said there were no signs of foul play, but celebrity news outlet TMZ, citing a search warrant, said a detective believed the deaths were "suspicious enough in nature to require a thorough search and investigation".

The person who reported the deaths found the door of Hackman's home unlocked and open, and pills scattered next to Arakawa's body, which was found in the bathroom with a space heater near to her head.

It appeared Arakawa had been dead "for some time," with the body in a state of decomposition, TMZ reported.

Hackman's body was found in another room, fully clothed, with sunglasses next to his body, the report said.

Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza did not provide a cause of death for the couple, who had been married since 1991. Hackman's daughter Elizabeth Jean told TMZ that carbon monoxide poisoning may be to blame.

Hackman, a two-time Academy Award winner, was credited for intense performances of everyman characters inspired by his troubled upbringing, notching up dozens of movie credits extending into his 70s.

He is perhaps best known for his portrayal of the tough and vulgar New York cop Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle in the 1971 crime thriller "The French Connection" -- for which he won an Oscar for best actor.

He won another golden statuette two decades later for best supporting actor for his portrayal of the brutal small-town sheriff "Little Bill" Daggett in the 1992 western "Unforgiven".

 

'Inspiring and magnificent'

 

Hollywood director Francis Ford Coppola on Thursday mourned his death.

"The loss of a great artist, always cause for both mourning and celebration: Gene Hackman a great actor, inspiring and magnificent in his work and complexity," Coppola wrote in a post on Instagram.

Not blessed with leading man good looks, Hackman drew on his talents and versatility, taking on a series of gritty roles and delivering thoughtful, intelligent performances.

"I wanted to act, but I'd always been convinced that actors had to be handsome," the actor once said.

"We have lost one of the true giants of the screen. Gene Hackman could play anyone, and you could feel a whole life behind it," "Star Trek" actor George Takei wrote on X.

Born in Illinois during the Great Depression, Hackman came from a broken family.

His father left when he was 13, waving enigmatically as he drove away one day, and his mother later died in a fire.

He also served an unpleasant stint in the US Marines, which he joined at 16 by lying about his age. But he later used his personal turmoil to flesh out his characters.

Hackman came to acting relatively late in life after dabbling in a series of jobs and only attracting attention in his 30s.

According to Hollywood legend, after his enrollment at the Pasadena Playhouse in California in the late 1950s, he and a fellow student, one Dustin Hoffman, were voted the "least likely to succeed".

On graduation, Hackman found work off-Broadway and began to turn heads. He earned his first Oscar nomination for best supporting actor in "Bonnie and Clyde."

That landmark 1967 film, in which Hackman played Clyde's brother Buck Barrow, put him on track for stardom.

Into the 21st century, he starred in "The Heist" and "The Royal Tenenbaums" in 2001, the latter winning him his third competitive Golden Globe, before announcing his retirement in 2008.

"It really costs me a lot emotionally to watch myself on screen," Hackman once said.

"I think of myself, and feel like I'm quite young, and then I look at this old man with the baggy chins and the tired eyes and the receding hairline and all that."

 

Balls and parades to fete Jane Austen's 250th birthday

By - Feb 26,2025 - Last updated at Feb 26,2025

A regency actor who works at the Jane Austen Centre adjusts a waxwork model of Jane Austen, in Bath, Somerset (AFP photo)

BATH, United Kingdom — Ballgowns are being stitched, bonnets brushed and tea rooms prepped as the United Kingdom prepares to celebrate the 250th birthday of beloved literary icon Jane Austen.

Quite how the author, born in the small Hampshire village of Steventon on December 16, 1775, has managed to entice and enchant readers for more than two centuries in an ever-changing world remains a mystery.

Who would have thought that quotes from her six novels and pages of writings would adorn T-shirts and badges in the 21st century?

And not just in the UK, for the author who wrote of love and manners in the early 19th century has inspired fans around the world and her writings remain just as fresh and relevant today.

 

"Her novels are really concerned with wider moral issues," said Kathryn Sutherland, an Austen researcher and professor at the University of Oxford.

People feel Austen "is accessible, even though she is great literature, and also that you can read her books many times and each time you find something new in them", she added.

 

Sutherland also acknowledged it was fabulously filmed TV series and movies, with their brooding male leads, which had brought Austen wider audiences in the past decades.

 

The author of classic novels "Pride and Prejudice", "Emma" and "Sense and Sensibility" had only just become known when she died on July 18, 1817, aged 41.

But her six novels, wittily and sharply dissecting the lives of 19th century rural aristocracy, have since sold millions of copies, led to film adaptations and inspired many other productions, from "Bridget Jones" to "Bridgerton".

 

Austen balls sold out 

 

Hundreds of people are expected to don period costume and stroll through the elegant Georgian streets of Bath in September for the annual 10-day Jane Austen Festival.

 

Austen lived for several years in the southwestern city, where she set her novels "Persuasion" and "Northanger Abbey".

 

A series of balls are planned, based around Austen's novels, with tickets already sold out for May and June despite a hefty £200 ($253) price tag.

With interest set to soar over the coming months, the BBC has kicked off the year with a new series -- "Miss Austen" -- devoted to the life of Jane's sister Cassandra, who burnt all her letters after her death.

She thus consigned to ashes some of Jane's deepest secrets, and to this day surprisingly little is known about the author.

 

Part of Austen's appeal rests on her depiction of a romanticised England with love affairs, tea and parties in the glorious surroundings of sprawling stately homes.

She also shone a harsh light on the status of women, for whom a good marriage was considered the only goal in a very restricted life.

The daughter of a clergyman, Austen herself remained unmarried despite a proposal, and spent most of her life with very little money.

 

'Women taking power' 

 

"Pride and Prejudice", with its main character Elizabeth Bennet who falls for the dashing Mr Darcy, is a firm fan favourite.

 

"Her female characters are very strong and vocal about their opinions and what they want," said Moa Aashacka, a 23-year-old Swedish student who was paying a Valentine's Day visit to the Jane Austen Centre in Bath with her boyfriend.

 

"They don't just accept marriage because they have to. They want to marry someone they actually like and love and who they feel respects them."

She added that Austen's novels were "more than romance... It's also about women taking power".

Tour guide Lauren Falconer, who helps giggling visitors dress up in Regency-style fashions, said all of Austen's characters are "so relatable" that "everyone has their favourite".

 

Maria Letizia d'Annibale, an English literature teacher visiting from Italy, said her pupils loved reading Austen's novels.

 

"Her stories are captivating. Young students really like her, especially the girls," she told AFP.

Part of the resurgence in Austen's appeal can be traced back to a stunning 1995 BBC adaption of "Pride and Prejudice", starring Colin Firth as Mr Darcy, and director Ang Lee's Oscar-winning adaption of "Sense and Sensibility", starring Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet and Hugh Grant.

Professor Sutherland credits these for propelling Austen "into a different level of popularity".

"In Jane Austen's novels, the hero, the male lead is really a kind of background figure. He is a moral instructor for the heroine, but he's not particularly sexy. Whereas in the films, of course, he's very sexy," she said.

"I think this turns the films into something that the novels are not, which is more narrowly romantic."

To coincide with the author's 250th birthday, Sutherland is organising an exhibition in Oxford called "Dancing with Jane Austen" with costumes from the films and examples of her writings about balls.

'Brat' icon Charli XCX picks up Brit award for best songwriter

By - Feb 26,2025 - Last updated at Feb 26,2025

LONDON — British pop sensation and "brat summer" icon Charli XCX on Wednesday won the Brit award for best songwriter of the year, putting her in pole position to scoop up the most honours in a weekend ceremony.

The 32-year-old also has five nominations going into Saturday's awards -- the highest of any artist -- including the nod for the coveted artist of the year prize.

"Charli's songwriting is distinctive, bold and relentlessly innovative," said Damian Christian, chair of the 2025 Brit committee.

 

And he added her highly successful album "Brat" had "taken her craft to new heights".

"Brat", Charli's sixth album launched in June, transformed her into one of the top music stars in 2024, with its lime-green cover and celebration of a relaxed, partying lifestyle.

 

It re-defined the word "brat" with Charli describing a "brat girl" as someone "who is a little messy and likes to party and maybe says some dumb things sometimes, who feels herself, but then also maybe has a breakdown, but kind of parties through it".

The word even became associated with Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris when fans began applying the coloured "brat" filter to the nominee's images.

 

Charli XCX, real name Charlotte Emma Aitchison, voiced approval with a sign-off -- "kamala IS brat" -- swiftly embraced by the Harris campaign.

In November, just days before Harris's presidency bid ended in defeat, Collins dictionary designated "brat" as its Word of the Year.

In past years, star singer-songwriters Ed Sheeran and Raye were also crowned with the best songwriter award ahead of the main competition.

Billie Eilish, Dua Lipa, Taylor Swift, The Beatles, The Cure are all up for awards along with Charli XCX on Saturday.

 

The 45th annual Brit Awards at London's O2 Arena will recognise the top musical talent of 2024, and also feature live performances from indie singer Sam Fender and US rapper Teddy Swims.

The coveted Best Album Of The Year Award will be fought out by Charli XCX, veteran goth band The Cure, seven-time Brit winner Dua Lipa, jazz group Ezra Collective and indie-rockers The Last Dinner Party.

US singer Sabrina Carpenter, who is up for the International Artist Of The Year Award, will be presented with the Brits Global Success award on the night, in recognition of her mammoth global sales in 2024.

The Brit Awards have recognised the cream of British pop music since they were first held in 1977, and have often been peppered with scandal and farce.

London Fashion Week: Burberry embraces escape to the countryside

By - Feb 26,2025 - Last updated at Feb 26,2025

A model presents a creation from Burberry ‘s Womenswear Fall-Winter 2025-2026 fashion show collection, during London Fashion Week, in London, on Monday (AFP photo)

LONDON — London Fashion Week wrapped up with Burberry sending its Autumn/Winter collection down the catwalk on Monday, capping off a relatively muted event in the rainy British capital.

Even the British luxury house sought to ditch the gloom with a show themed around a countryside getaway, transporting its guests to the cozy, old-fashioned charm of a British country house.

Creative director Daniel Lee, who joined Burberry a little over two years ago, was “inspired by the incredible British interiors”, and luxurious fabrics like velvet were used in the famous trench coat, tailored suits and flowing dresses.

Quilted jackets and skirts covered in florals blended into the tapestries draped onto the white pillars of the Tate Britain, while other styles included oversized knit sweaters, perfect for an evening by the fire.

The somber hues, with flashes of bright orange, yellow or blue, were inspired by Lee’s time “in autumn walking in nature, in Yorkshire”, the 39-year-old English designer told reporters after the show.

Lee has tried to give the troubled British house a facelift while remaining true to its traditional, luxury roots, exemplified in his fifth and latest collection.

Alongside former supermodel Naomi Campbell, the runway featured actors who have starred in royal dramas “The Crown” and “Downtown Abbey” as well as Regency-era drama “Bridgerton”, as Burberry tried to slot itself into the roster of traditional storylines seeing a popular revival.

The fashion giant famed for its trench coats and signature tartan print is the subject of rumours about the departure of its creative director, who could be replaced by English designer Kim Jones.

However, these were brushed off by Lee. “I love the brand, it’s an incredible brand. It’s really an honour to work for Burberry,” he said.

‘Improving’

Burberry, which has been experiencing months of financial difficulty, began an “emergency” refocusing on its iconic products such as its trademark trench coat late last year in a bid to stave off falling sales.

Chief Executive Joshua Schulman was brought in last July and tasked with turning around Burberry’s fortunes.

“Josh has been here for just over six months, and things are going well, things are definitely improving,” said Lee. “I think we’re all in a really positive place.”

Brands across London Fashion Week and the world are grappling with a reduced appetite for luxury products.

Still, there was room for spectacle across the four days — from a captivating monologue by Florence Pugh opening a “rebellious” Harris Reed catwalk to master milliner Stephen Jones flexing his muscles with hats made out of chocolate, satin and even glass.

On the catwalks, 1980’s-inspired bubble skirts, fabrics from seersucker to sheer, plenty of corsets and lingerie, tailoring and streetwear were paraded down dramatic sets dotted around London.

Slipping behind

Despite the presence of renowned designers such as Simone Rocha and Richard Quinn, and promising stylists such as S.S. Daley and Harris Reed, several fashion experts said London Fashion Week was falling further behind Paris and New York every year.

“There is a bit of a damp spirit, an empty feeling, to the London schedule at the moment,” Daley told The Guardian newspaper before his show.

Caroline Rush, the director of the British Fashion Council which organises London Fashion Week, acknowledged it was “a particularly challenging time” for British brands.

Brands have been dealt several blows following the pandemic, such as Brexit and last year’s closure of the global luxury online platform Matches Fashion.

This year’s event is almost a day shorter than the previous Autumn-Winter 2024 fashion week, with several designers opting for a dinner or presentation instead of a pricier runway show.

Buyers and influencers such as Beka Gvishiani of Style Not Com, an Instagram account that charts fashion news, did not make the trip, while Northern Irish designer Jonathan Anderson was also absent with his brand JW Anderson.

Rush, who is organising her last London Fashion Week, said the event remains “so relevant because ... we have so many small independent businesses, they need a platform to be able to show to reach global audiences”.

Dubai’s culinary icons: Must-try dishes from MENA’s 50 Best Restaurants

By - Feb 24,2025 - Last updated at Feb 24,2025

AMMAN — MENA’s 50 Best Restaurants was recently unveiled, and Dubai restaurants once again dominated the list. Nineteen restaurants in Dubai were included on the Middle East & North Africa’s 50 Best Restaurants list for 2025 – up from 18 in 2024. Dubai restaurants take the top three spots, and six of the top 10.

 

Recognising the best of the best in the gastronomy sector across the region, this achievement highlights Dubai’s commitment to culinary excellence and extraordinary dining experiences.

 

Every visit to these restaurants is an absolute feast for the taste buds and it is tempting to try everything from the menu. If you are still undecided on what to order on your next dining experience, here are the recommended dishes from the menu:

 

Orfali Bros

For the third year in a row, Orfali Bros. Bistro retains its number one spot. Three brothers, one dream. At Orfali Bros ‘bistronomy’ the brothers are proud to serve up dishes that reflect their shared culinary passion.

 

What to order: It’s especially challenging to choose a dish from their menu as everything seems unique, which means doing a repeat visit to the restaurant. For first timers, try the favourites such as the shish barak a la sgyoza (beef dumplings with a Middle Eastern twist), salmon with miso and creamy tahini, and OB cheeseburger.

 

Tresind Studio

Retaining its second-place position is the ever-popular Trèsind Studio. Chef Himanshu Saini weaves stories with the intricately-plated and expertly-spiced degustation menus at this modern Indian fine dining spot. Found in St. Regis Gardens, this insider haunt seats just 20 at a time and presents a multi-hour extravaganza that unfolds with theatrical flourish.

 

What to order: Tresind Studio offers a degustation menu. A standout dish from a truly top tier selection is the turbot. At the heart of the dish is a slow-cooked turbot, complemented by a silky pâté of caramelized cauliflower. Delicate raw cauliflower shavings and an earthy black truffle thokku help bring balance. The dish is finished with cauliflower varuval, which is created with fragrant spices, creating a curry of golden perfection and evoking the breezy coastline and the region's rich culinary heritage.

 

Kinoya

Neha Mishra has been successfully spearheading her own Japanese restaurant since 2021. Loyal fans flock to Kinoya for a taste of her take on izakaya. Taking the everyday ramen and transforming it to a foodie revelation, everything here – right down to the noodles – is handmade with love, following closely-guarded recipes.

 

What to order: Try theChef Special Ramen, a slow-cooked clear chicken broth with dashi, seared chicken, katsuboshi salt, and burnt garlic oil drizzled on top.

 

Ossiano

A rite of passage for the culinary crowd,Ossiano at Atlantis The Palm qserves up an immersive, multi-course degustation offering in a grand gold and blue-hued setting, with floor-to-ceiling aquatic views. Specialising in seafood, the plates are as astounding as the surroundings.

 

What to order: Kokotxas, an emblematic fishermen and sailor dish of the Iberic peninsula, using the “bacalhau” – Portuguese for codfish. The crew of Vasco de Gama themselves relies on bacalhau while they make their way to India around Africa, all the way from Lisbon. The dish is glazed with a black sesame and black garlic sauce, enriched with smoked Bordier butter from Brittany. It is garnished with roasted teardrop peas, sea grapes and Kristal caviar.

 

Jun’s

Drawing on celebrity chef Kelvin Cheung's French training, Canadian roots and Asian heritage, Downtown Dubai-based Jun's has a prime location and proven pedigree. Expect North American comfort food, combined with Asian flavours, served up in an upmarket, chic setting.


What to order: Try thebutter poached lobstertossed with a fragrant Macanese curry sauce served in a crispy pani puri shell and filled with an agua de chile tableside. Macanese curry is a staple in the Hong Kong cafe culture and was one of the Cheung family’s favourites to make in North America to bring back a taste of home. It gives the Pani Puri, inspired by Chef Kelvin’s favourite snack from the bustling streets of Bombay, a delightful explosion of flavours, from China and Portugal, that continuously evolve with a mix of acidity, gentle heat and sweetness. Take note, this is meant to be eaten in one bite!

 

Moonrise

Set at the summit of the luxurious apartment complex Eden House, twelve-seater Moonrise is a feast for all the senses as the restaurant itself is a sleek glass box with views of the city at all sides.Serving a set multi-course degustation menu, with no exceptions or tweaks to the order of service, chef Soleman Haddad heads up a young, dynamic team whose passion shows on the plate and is the reason behind their position.

 

What to order: One of top dishes on the set menu is Moonrise’s Grilled Cheese. This dish pays homage to the very first thing Chef Solemann ever cooked at 4 years of age, the humble grilled cheese sandwich. Made from locally baked Hokkaido milk bread, a sauce crafted from 36 month aged parmesan, a little Thai black garlic for sweetness and finally, topped with a slice of truffle for texture.

 

BOCA

Boasting Mediterranean flavours and local ingredients, this cool European restaurant in DIFC is known for super-creative dishes with a big emphasis on sustainability. The interiors of this award-winning restaurant are minimal and chic and extend a modern vibe to the space. The ingredient combinations are exciting and inventive, and there's a strong push on vegan food too.

 

What to order: One of the recommended dishes at BOCA is the raw kingfish served with pure harvest tomato gazpacho, with broad beans, corns, salicorna, and cucumber. It tastes as good as it looks!

 

3Fils

This homegrown favourite has long-charmed Dubai's foodies. The chic yet casual dining experience, coupled with calming harbour-side views and no-reservations policy, makes this one of Dubai's most unassumingly spectacular dining hotspots. You’ll find a variety of tantalising dishes on the menu featuring modern Asian cuisine with a Japanese influence.

What to order: You can’t go wrong with the good ol’ sando.Make sure to try the mouthwatering Wagyu sando, made of A5 Wagyu tenderloin, Japanese bread, mustard, and onion puree.

 

Bait Maryam

Starting as a collection of recipes handed down through generations, Bait Maryam has quickly transformed into a staple choice for unpretentious and authentic Middle Eastern meals. To chef Salam, the venue serves a slice of home, as it is named after her mother and inspired by many dishes and keepsakes from her childhood.

 

What to order: Kabab Hamoudi is a heartfelt recipe created by Chef Salam’s son, lovingly n icknamed Hamoudi. The dish features tender kebab rolled in homemade bread, served with smoky moutabbal and a slow-cooked tomato sauce. As one of the restaurant’s best-selling dishes, it preserves the rich culinary traditions of their ancestors while embracing the creativity of the current generation.

 

Governance & Success in Today’s World

By , - Feb 23,2025 - Last updated at Feb 23,2025

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

In today’s ever-changing and competitive landscape, achieving success demands more than just effort — it requires mastering essential principles and applying the right tools.

One of the most impactful concepts for driving results is governance.

But what is governance, and why is it so crucial?

Governance is a system built on five foundational pillars that promote transparency, fairness and credibility while guiding organisations toward excellence. Let’s break it down in simple terms:

 

The Five Pillars of Governance

 

1. Participation:

Great leaders know the value of teamwork.

By involving employees in decision-making, organisations can tap into diverse perspectives, fostering creativity and achieving better outcomes.

 

2. Clear responsibilities:

 

Clarity is key. 

Assigning welldefined roles and responsibilities ensures everyone knows their tasks.

 

3. Accountability:

 

Success thrives on balance.

Organisations must establish a transparent system of rewards and consequences, making accountability a core value.

 

4. Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E):

 

Progress needs tracking.

A robust system for evaluating goals and performance ensures everyone stays on course and keeps improving.

 

5. Transparency: 

 

Sharing results openly with employees, stakeholders and partners builds trust and motivates everyone to aim higher.

 

Other elements for success

 

To stay ahead, managers and leaders must also embrace the following ideas:

 

Accelerators

 

Think of accelerators as time-savers: tools, strategies and techniques that speed up processes while maintaining top quality and minimising costs

 

Enablers

 

These are the resources that help drive results, such as talented people and digital technologies.

Empowering skilled individuals and investing in the right tools paves the way for success.

 

Sustainability

 

In a world full of crises, using resources wisely is essential to ensure lasting success and stability.

 

Excellence

 

Striving for excellence means benchmarking your achievements against others, setting high standards and continuously improving.

By understanding and applying these principles, leaders can create systems that not only achieve results but also build a culture of growth and resilience.

Governance, with its focus on fairness and transparency, provides the foundation for legal, ethical and sustained success.

 

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

How a 'forgotten' Minnesota monastery inspired 'The Brutalist'

By - Feb 22,2025 - Last updated at Feb 22,2025

For half a century, the existence of this modernist masterpiece has been mainly known to the Benedictine monks who worshipped there (AFP photo)

COLLEGEVILLE, United States — On a snowy prairie in Minnesota stands a monastery like no other. A concrete trapezoid banner encasing a bell tower looms over a giant, beehive-shaped front window composed of hundreds of gently shimmering hexagons.

For half a century, the existence of this modernist masterpiece has been mainly known to the Benedictine monks who worship there, and the hordes of architects who make pilgrimages to Saint John's Abbey Church each summer.

 

But these days, it is finding new fame as the basis for "The Brutalist" the epic drama about an immigrant architect, haunted by the Holocaust, that is a favorite to win best picture at the Oscars.

The tale of the church's genesis is as unlikely as the movie plot it inspired, spanning titans of architecture, ambitious monks, Vatican reform -- and an almighty row over that beehive window.

Giving tours to guests, abbey member Alan Reed begins by asking his guests: "How could this have happened?"

"That this small college at the time, in the middle of nowhere, run by a group of monks, would hire a world-famous architect... it is an amazing story," he told AFP.

 

'Extraordinary' 

 

It begins with Baldwin Dworschak, a 44-year-old "buttoned-down" abbot, who inherited stewardship of a monastery rapidly outgrowing its historic grounds in the post-war US boom years of the 1950s.

At a time when the Catholic Church was reforming and modernising, Dworschak and his advisors saw an opportunity to emulate the pioneering 12th-century European monks who ushered in the then-new Gothic style.

 

Arranged by a monk who had studied architecture, letters inviting commissions were sent out to Richard Neutra, Walter Gropius, Eero Saarinen and Marcel Breuer -- among the world's leading modernist architects at the time.

Amazingly, several responded, and Breuer -- a Hungarian who had trained at Germany's influential Bauhaus school, and invented the sleek, tubular-steel chairs that furnish trendy offices to this day -- was appointed to oversee the giant church in a far northern corner of the United States.

 

The design he came up with was "something nobody had ever seen before," said Victoria Young, a professor of architecture at the University of St Thomas in Minnesota, who wrote a book on Breuer's "extraordinary" creation.

 

Chinese American architect I.M. Pei -- a former student of Breuer -- once wrote that Saint John's Abbey Church would be considered one of the greatest examples of 20th century architecture if it were located in New York, not Minnesota.

 

Almighty row 

 

Brady Corbet, director of "The Brutalist", cites a book written by Hilary Thimmesh, a junior member of Dworschak's committee, as a key source for his movie.

Corbet told AFP he has visited Saint John's, and stumbled upon Thimmesh's memoir while doing extensive reading for the film.

 

Several parallels are clear: An architect designing a colossal Christian edifice on a remote US hilltop, in a controversial modernist style.

A major source of dramatic tension in the film occurs when the client -- a millionaire tycoon in the movie, rather than an abbot -- brings in his own designer, undermining the original architect.

 

In real life, Breuer struck up a friendship with Dworschak, but they fell out when the monks brought in their own stained-glass window designer, spurning the work of Breuer's close friend and former teacher Joseph Albers.

 

In a bitter letter, Breuer calls the move a "sudden blow" and states it would be "better to do nothing" than go ahead with the monks' preference.

The new design must be "terminated immediately," says another letter -- to no avail.

The power struggle in "The Brutalist" culminates in a horrific act of sexual violence in an Italian marble quarry.

Thankfully, the real-life client and architect quickly made up.

 

'Forgotten' 

 

Some inevitable Hollywood hyperbole aside, an Oscar-nominated film bringing attention to their monastery's hidden treasure is a source of pride for those connected to Saint John's.

 

Architect Robert McCarter wrote a book on Breuer "because I felt Breuer had been forgotten, even by the profession, to some degree", he told AFP.

"There are many people who think that Saint John's is, by far, his greatest building. That includes me," he said.

"It's still a place that enough people don't know about," agreed Young.

For the monks of Saint John's today, the film could offer a more practical lifeline.

The church is badly in need of repairs, with some concrete starting to crumble, and steel beginning to rust.

Their order has shrunk, from being the world's largest male Benedictine monastery with 340 monks, to below 100. It is far too few for such a cavernous space.

"If we could raise enough money," the monks could at least heat the church in winter and cool it in summer, said Reed.

 

And the attention the film is getting?

"The monks certainly are quite impressed," he said.

Egypt unveils first ancient royal tomb since Tutankhamun

By - Feb 20,2025 - Last updated at Feb 20,2025

These handout photos released by the Egyptian ministry of antiquities on Wednesday show the entrance to the tomb of King Thutmose II in Luxor in southern Egypt (AFP photo)

CAIRO — Egypt's antiquities authority says it has found the ancient tomb of King Thutmose II, the first royal burial to be located since the famed discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb in 1922.


The tomb, discovered near the Valley of the Kings in Luxor in southern Egypt, belonged to King Thutmose II of the 18th dynasty, who lived nearly 3,500 years ago.

Thutmose II was an ancestor to Tutankhamun himself, and his half-sister and queen consort was Pharaoh Hatshepsut.

Her giant mortuary temple stands on the west bank of the Nile at Luxor a few kilometres  from where the tomb of Thutmose II was found.

Although preliminary studies suggest its contents were moved in ancient times -- leaving the tomb without the iconic mummy or gilded splendour of the Tutankhamun find -- the antiquities ministry on Tuesday called the discovery "one of the most significant archaeological breakthroughs in recent years".

It has been excavated by a joint Egyptian-British mission, led by the Supreme Council of Antiquities and the New Kingdom Research Foundation.

The tomb's entrance was first located in 2022 in the Luxor Mountains west of the Valley of the Kings, but was believed at the time to lead to the tomb of a royal wife.

But the team then found "fragments of alabaster jars inscribed with the name of Pharaoh Thutmose II, identified as the 'deceased king', alongside inscriptions bearing the name of his chief royal consort, Queen Hatshepsut", confirming whose tomb it was, the ministry said.

Shortly after the king's burial, water flooded the burial chamber, damaging the interior and leaving fragments of plaster that bore parts of the Book of Amduat, an ancient mortuary text on the underworld.

Some funerary furniture belonging to Thutmose II has also been recovered from the tomb in "the first-ever find" of its kind, according to the ministry.

It quoted mission chief Dr Piers Litherland as saying the team will continue its work in the area, hoping to find the tomb's original contents.

There has been a surge of major archaeological discoveries in recent years, as Egypt seeks to boost its tourism industry as a key source of foreign currency revenue.

Last year, Egypt hosted 15.7 million tourists and aims to attract 18 million visitors in 2025.

The crown jewel of the government's strategy is the long-delayed inauguration of the Grand Egyptian Museum at the foot of the pyramids in Giza, which Egypt has said will finally open this year.

 

 

'Conclave' and 'Brutalist' share BAFTA honours

By - Feb 19,2025 - Last updated at Feb 19,2025

Papal thriller ‘Conclave’ and immigrant epic ‘The Brutalist’ on February 16 tied for top honours at Britain's BAFTA 

LONDON — Papal thriller "Conclave" and immigrant epic "The Brutalist" on Sunday tied for top honours at Britain's BAFTA awards with each film picking up four coveted gongs.

"Conclave", directed by German-born Edward Berger, won the BAFTA for the best film with its tale of the intrigue and horse-trading behind the scenes during the election of a new pope.

Accepting the award, Berger recalled the journey to make the film took seven years, paying tribute to British screenplay writer Peter Straughan's "wonderful script" and lead actor Ralph Fiennes.

US filmmaker Brady Corbet took the BAFTA for best director for "The Brutalist", while leading man Adrien Brody scooped up the best actor gong for his portrayal of a Hungarian Holocaust survivor and architect who emigrates to the United States.

Brody told a winners press conference that the film was "an opportunity for me to honour my own ancestral struggles".

In "a film that speaks to tremendous cruelty and despicable behaviour in our past... we see elements existing today that can guide us and remind us of that," he added.

Veteran British actor Fiennes, who played a cardinal in "Conclave", once again saw his hopes of winning a BAFTA gong dashed, losing out to Brody in the race for the honour.

Scandal-hit "Emilia Perez", a surreal musical about a Mexican druglord who transitions to a woman, had been heavily favoured at the beginning of the year. But it ended the evening with just two BAFTAs, including one for Zoe Saldana for best supporting actress.

Until last month, French director Jacques Audiard's movie had been expected to be a frontrunner having won 11 nominations.

 

But old racist and Islamophobic tweets by lead actor Karla Sofia Gascon surfaced at the end of January, shaking up the race just before the London ceremony and the Oscars on March 2.

A surprise of the night was the BAFTA for best actress which went to 25-year-old Mikey Madison for her portrayal of a sex worker in the black comedy "Anora" about an erotic dancer's whirlwind romance gone wrong.

 

Madison, who beat out frontrunner Demi Moore, told reporters she wanted to dedicate the award to "the sex worker community, I see you, you deserve respect and human dignity".

Although they can often set the tone for the Oscars, the BAFTAs -- the biggest night of the year for the British film industry -- regularly diverge from the films favoured by the Academy Awards in Los Angeles.

"Emilia Perez" director Audiard, in accepting the BAFTA for best film not in the English language, thanked all his stars, including "dear" Gascon who did not attend the ceremony amid the scandal surrounding her past tweets.

 

Moore, Timothee Chalamet and Ariana Grande were also at the glitzy evening hosted by "Doctor Who" and "Good Omens" star David Tennant, but all left empty-handed.

Best supporting actor went to "Succession" star Kieran Culkin for his role in "A Real Pain" about Jewish American cousins who tour Poland in honour of their grandmother. The film also garnered the best original screenplay for Jesse Eisenberg.

Saldana, who won a Golden Globe last month for her role as the sassy lawyer in "Emilia Perez", said she was dedicating her BAFTA award to her trans nephew.

"Conclave" also picked up awards for outstanding British film, editing and best adapted screenplay, while "The Brutalist" took awards for cinematography and original score.

"Wicked" picked up two BAFTAs for costume and production design, while Rich Peppiatt who wrote "Kneecap", a docu-drama about an audacious trio of Northern Irish rappers, won for an outstanding debut by a British writer.

 

"Dune: Part Two" won BAFTAs for both special visual effects and best sound.

 

To huge cheers from the audience, "Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl" picked up two BAFTAs for best animated feature and best Children's and Family Film.

France's Coralie Fargeat was the only woman nominated in the directing category, for "The Substance", which in the end picked up just one BAFTA for hair and make-up.

 

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