call_end

    • chevron_right

      US wants Ukraine to withdraw from Donbas and create ‘free economic zone’, says Zelenskyy

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:39

    Ukrainian president says plan would not be fair without guarantees that Russia would not simply take over zone

    TheUS wants Ukraine to withdraw its troops from the Donbas region, and Washington would then create a “free economic zone” in the parts Kyiv currently controls, Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said.

    Previously, the US had suggested Kyiv should hand over the parts of Donbas it still controlled to Russia, but the Ukrainian president said on Thursday that Washington had now suggested a compromise version in which Ukrainian troops would withdraw, but Russian troops would not advance into the territory.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Amanda Seyfried says she is not apologising for calling Charlie Kirk ‘hateful’ after his shooting

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:34

    The Housemaid actor received backlash in September when she left a comment on Instagram after the rightwing activist was killed

    The Housemaid star Amanda Seyfried has said she is “not fucking apologising” for describing Charlie Kirk as “hateful” after the latter was shot dead in September.

    Seyfried was speaking to Who What Wear when she was asked about her social media activity, including the backlash around her Kirk comment. “I’m not fucking apologising for that. I mean, for fuck’s sake, I commented on one thing. I said something that was based on actual reality and actual footage and actual quotes. What I said was pretty damn factual, and I’m free to have an opinion, of course.”

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Silent Night, Deadly Night review – killer Santa remake is overstuffed

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:32

    There are too many competing and overfamiliar ideas in this busy slasher reboot that’s sorely lacking in style

    There was a bizarre moral outrage back in November 1984 when seasonal slasher Silent Night, Deadly Night dared to put an axe in the hands of Santa. Despite being, you know, not a real person he was once treated with enough reverence to cause parent-led protests, a ban of all advertising and then of the film itself. It provided a sharp edge to an otherwise blunt and unremarkable post-Halloween knockoff and might help to explain why it managed to eke out four junky sequels and a 2012 remake.

    We’re now at the inevitable second remake stage but the 2025 redo arrives after the gimmick of Killer Santa has now become a subgenre in itself. He’s cropped up in Christmas Bloody Christmas , Christmas Evil, Santa’s Slay, Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale , Deadly Games and last year’s Terrifier 3 and the makers of this December’s take are more than aware that seeing Santa with a weapon isn’t enough to shock today’s horror fans.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Leo Cullen will use lessons he learned at Leicester to help dismantle Tigers

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:04

    Leinster head coach admits his stint at Welford Road helped ‘shape’ him and could be key in Champions Cup clash

    Leicester v Leinster fixtures have become common recently – the fifth since 2022 takes place on Friday night – but the history between the sides runs far deeper. Leo Cullen, head coach of the Dublin-based province, spent a couple of seasons at Welford Road in the mid-2000s, winning the Premiership in 2006-07 and losing a Heineken Cup final against Wasps in the same year.

    Since 2022 the former second-row has overseen four Champions Cup victories against his former club, including two in 2023-24. Three and a half years ago, there was a masterful quarter-final dismantling of what was then Steve Borthwick’s side. Leinster will now shoot for a hat-trick of Welford Road victories this decade, and the presence of the New Zealand international Rieko Ioane, on full debut, is sure to help.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      First trains to join Manchester’s Bee Network by end of 2026

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:00

    Andy Burnham unveils next step in transport system, allowing contactless travel with fares capped across trains, buses and trams

    The first passenger trains in the Bee Network will join by the end of 2026, after Greater Manchester disclosed the next steps in its ambitious transport system.

    Unveiling a yellow-branded Northern train, the regional mayor, Andy Burnham, said two lines from central Manchester – to Glossop and Stalybridge – would join the network in a year, allowing contactless travel with fares capped across trains, buses and trams.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Goodbye June review – Kate Winslet’s Christmas heartwarmer is like a two-hour John Lewis ad

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:00 • 1 minute

    Star turns from Helen Mirren, Andrea Riseborough and Toni Colette can’t stop cartoony sentimentality smothering this film directed by Winslet and written by her son Joe Anders

    Kate Winslet’s feature directing debut is a family movie, scripted by her son Joe Anders; it’s a well-intentioned and starrily cast yuletide heartwarmer, like a two-hour John Lewis Christmas TV ad without the logo at the end. There are one or two nice lines and sharp moments but they are submerged in a treacly soup of sentimentality; in the end, I couldn’t get past the cartoony quasi-Richard Curtis characterisation and the weird not-quite-earthlingness of the people involved. Having said this, I am aware of having been first in the queue to denigrate Winslet’s Christmas film The Holiday , that is regarded by many as one of the most successful films of all time.

    Helen Mirren is the June of the title, an affectionate but sharp-tongued matriarch who is diagnosed with terminal cancer in the run-up to Christmas, and her entire quarrelling clan will have to assemble in her hospital room. June, with a kind of benign cunning, realises that she can use her last days as a cathartic crisis that will cure her adult children’s unspoken hurt. They are a stressed careerist (Winslet), a stay-at-home mum (Andrea Riseborough), a hippy-dippy natural birth counsellor (Toni Collette) and a troubled soul (Johnny Flynn), plus all their various kids. There is also June’s daft old husband Bernie, played by Timothy Spall, who likes a drink and can’t talk about his feelings, and whose scatterbrained goofiness has a sad origin. Stephen Merchant plays Riseborough’s lovably useless husband and a gentle hospital nurse, played by Fisayo Akinade, is the ensemble’s self-effacing guide to a wiser future.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      I now declare you throuple: how to plan a polyamorous wedding

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 17:00

    A throuple in Tennessee shares how they planned a fairytale wedding, from rings to first dance

    On the day of her wedding, Janie Coppola, 30, overslept. She woke up to a friend banging on her bedroom window, and had to quickly do her hair before rushing to the venue, a dreamy castle in Chattanooga, Tennessee . Fortunately, the rest of the day went smoothly, and on the afternoon of 18 October, she walked down the aisle in a big white dress to be wed to her husband. And her wife.

    “Your favorite throuple got hitched,” Margaret French, 32, Janie’s wife, captioned an Instagram post about the day.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Gen Z know the social contract is broken. It’ll take more than youth clubs and StarmerTok to reach them | Gaby Hinsliff

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 16:58

    Labour’s £500m national youth strategy has some positives, but real change must start by tackling the root causes of unhappiness

    Bonnie Blue, the porn actor who recently made headlines for her antics in Bali – which you probably shouldn’t Google – has come out in support of Nigel Farage.

    And in not unconnected news, “rage baiting” – saying deliberately annoying things to get attention – is the Oxford University Press’s word of the year . Bonnie’s most effective way of advertising her X-rated content to the masses now is by generating enough controversy to get her publicly talked about, and she’s very good at making just enough noise (this time in the Spectator , of all places) to drum up a bit of traffic.

    Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Asked about The Donald’s national security strategy, the Commons was remarkable for its absences

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 5 days ago - 16:56 • 1 minute

    You’d think MPs would be lining up to decry the US president’s threat to destabilise Europe. Instead, only backbenchers and a few junior ministers bothered to turn up

    Twas the fortnight before Christmas and all through the house, not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse. Apart from a few exceptions. Labour backbencher Matt Western had managed to secure an urgent question on President Trump’s new national security strategy and the Commons itself was remarkable for its absences. A roll-call of dishonour.

    Take Nigel Farage. You would have thought he would have had a lot to say on the subject. After all, when Barack Obama had intervened in the Brexit referendum campaign to say that the UK would be at the back of the queue for any trade deal with the US, Nige had been outraged. How dare the president try to interfere with the democratic processes of another sovereign country? So now that Donald Trump was threatening to do much the same thing in countries all across Europe, surely this was the time for Nige to make a stand. This was surely a point of principle for him. Were he to have any.

    Continue reading...