Just to get the first question out of the way, Pierce Brosnan, known in many circles as 007 James Bond, and martial arts legend Jackie Chan do not spar in their upcoming film, The Foreigner.
“That did not come into the equation,” Irishman Brosnan, 64, admits. “I might have thrown a few Irish roundhouse (kicks) and probably would have been dealt with quite quickly.”
Instead, the two stars face off in a cat-and-mouse conflict that drives the action thriller (in theaters Oct. 13), which unveils its first trailer exclusively at usatoday.com.
Put July 2018 in your diary now: the Mamma Mia crew are back on the silver screen.
Ten years on from the film’s debut, and subsequent £460m profits, the original cast – including Meryl Streep, Amanda Seyfried, Pierce Brosnan and Colin Firth – have announced that they are reassembling to create a sequel to the smash musical hit, titled Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again.
<a href=”http://www.vogue.co.uk/article/mamma-mia-sequel-mamma-mia-here-we-go-again-confirmed” target=”_blank”>Read The Full Story</a>
It seems like it was just yesterday that Meryl Streep filmed her vacation to Greece, where she sang and danced though a wedding weekend with all of her closest friends. At least, that’s what watching 2008’s Mamma Mia! The Movie feels like. And now, 10 years after the musical hit cineplexes, Universal is bringing everyone back for Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again!, a new film sequel to the classic Broadway show and yet another opportunity for Meryl Streep to spend two hours frolicking on the beach in overalls.
Journey to the seemingly idyllic world of Native Hawaiians, where communities are surrounded by experimental test sites and pesticides sprayed upwind of their neighborhoods. Poisoning Paradise details the ongoing struggle to advance bold new legislation governing the fate of their island home.
In an attempt to diversify an economy that was overly reliant on tourism, policymakers in both Hawaii and Washington, D.C. encouraged the world’s largest biotech companies to utilize Kauai’s favorable climate and fertile soil to test genetically engineered seeds and crops. Corporations including Syngenta, Pioneer DuPont, BASF, and Dow Agrosciences have since applied hundreds of tons of Restricted Use (RU) pesticides on thousands of acres across the Garden Island’s West Side, the traditional homeland of an indigenous and disenfranchised population.
Interviews with local residents, scientists, and healthcare professionals reveal the hardships and ecological dangers of intensive and continuous pesticide applications and the environmental injustice thrust upon people living in one of the most sacred, biologically unique and diverse locations on earth. Award-winning investigative journalist Paul Kolberstein describes Kauai as “one of the most toxic agricultural environments in all of American agriculture.”
As champions of a grassroots movement to make Kauai County Bill 2491 law, local activists battle political corruption, corporate bullying, and systematic concealment by the agrichemical industry.
Although Kauai’s plight might seem like a local issue, this debate is in fact raging around the world as country after country is becoming concerned about pesticides, the future of food, and sustainable farming practices.