‘Dilbert’ comic creator Scott Adams dies

Source: Radio New Zealand

Scott Adams, the creator of the popular comic strip Dilbert, has died, according to an announcement on his social media pages.

Adams, who was 68, announced in May that he’d been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer.

Dilbert, a chronicle of the indignities of American office work, was one of the country’s most widely read comic strips from its breakout success in the 1990s until February 2023, when Adams made racist comments against Black Americans, calling them a “hate group” that white people should “get the hell away from,” in response to a dubious poll about whether it’s “OK to be white.” Hundreds of newspapers stopped carrying Dilbert within days, and the strip was soon dropped by its distributor.

Dilbert, a fictional character created by Scott Adams.

Scott Adams, Fair use

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Trump announces 25% tariff on any country doing business with Iran

Source: Radio New Zealand

US President Donald Trump. AFP / Getty Images North America / Kevin Dietsch

US President Donald Trump has announced a 25 percent on any country that does business with the Islamic Republic of Iran.

“Effective immediately, any Country doing business with the Islamic Republic of Iran will pay a Tariff of 25% on any and all business being done with the United States of America. This Order is final and conclusive,” he said on X.

More to come…

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

How I have fun with friends without spending money

Source: Radio New Zealand

When I first moved back to Australia after years living in Spain, I brought home an unexpected skill: how to hang out with friends without spending money.

Cash was tight while abroad, and most of my circle couldn’t afford regular fancy dinners or big nights out, so we learnt to get creative — and often had more fun.

Here’s how I’ve kept those low-cost, high-fun habits alive for years, even after returning home to a city where socialising often seems to mean shelling out.

Picnic in the back of a ute? Why not

ABC/Koren Helbig

How to swap, not shop, in style

Learning the art of frugal fun in Spain

I didn’t deliberately set out to live frugally when I moved to Spain in 2013. But, having just launched my own business, work was patchy and I wanted to conserve my savings nest egg.

Plus, Spain was in the grip of a long-running property crash and recession. A quarter of the country was unemployed, and many were under-employed — including most of my friends.

So, we got inventive. We’d meet at the beach with a cheap bottle of wine and our ukuleles and play together until sundown. Or carpool to a nearby mountain range and hike for the day with backpacks full of sandwiches.

To celebrate my 30th birthday, I threw a simple party at home with dozens of origami paper swans hanging from the ceiling — decorations we’d spent a fun afternoon hand-folding together.

Spain also has a brilliant culture of “third spaces” — areas beyond work and home, such as town squares, public plazas and street benches, where people of all ages gather to socialise late into the evening.

Because none of us had much disposable income, few ever proposed expensive plans. Our focus was usually on spending time together, rather than money.

Bringing it home to Australia

When I moved back home to Tarntanya (Adelaide) in late 2017, the cost of living came as a shock after Spain’s comparatively cheap food and rent prices.

Catching up with old friends, the default almost always involved forking out — coffee dates, dinners out, drinks at a bar. All fun things to do, but a strain on my meagre budget.

So, I started suggesting alternatives, such as:

Koren Helbig enjoys helping her friends make wicking beds in their backyard.

ABC/Koren Helbig

Sometimes I’d explain that I was trying to save a bit, but mostly I’d frame it as wanting to do more creative things and see more of our city. If I ever ran out of ideas, I’d turn back to my well-thumbed copy of The Art of Frugal Hedonism.

Pretty much everyone was immediately on board. Many friends were quietly feeling the same pinch and were happy to save a buck or two.

Free book clubs and music nights

Eight years on — and now with a solo mortgage to my name — prioritising thrifty fun has become even more crucial to balancing the budget while actively nurturing a solid friendship circle.

For example, I take a weekly dawn beach walk with my best friend. It’s locked into our calendars on repeat, and unless someone is dramatically ill, we walk — rain, hail or shine.

Three other friends and I gather on the last Wednesday of each month for music nights, sharing dinner and tinkering with simple song covers and harmonies. ‘Permablitz’ gardening working bees have also brought mates together.

And, every two months, my book club meets. We borrow library book club sets for free instead of buying our own copies and take turns hosting with plenty of snacks. That set-up has kept eight of us connected for almost five years.

My friend Nat takes this idea even further, organising regular “permaculture skill-share weekends” with like-minded Tasmanian folk who gather for free peer-to-peer learning on anything from verge gardening and bicycle maintenance to yoga, mending and wood carving.

The upshot of all this — beyond coin saved — is reduced consumerism and therefore a lower environmental impact.

Koren Helbig counts book club as one of her cost-free connections with friends.

ABC/Supplied

Finding balance between saving and splurging

Of course, I still splash out now and then on tickets to the theatre or a gig, the occasional dinner out or a weekend getaway.

All this feels more manageable because, by consuming less as my default, I have more dosh for the things I truly value.

Spending less also helps me afford a four-day work week — giving me more time for hanging out with friends and family.

Making time is part of the challenge, but in today’s cash-strapped economy, finding the money is too.

Turns out I can ease the pinch of both by prioritising frugally fun ways to cut back without cutting out connection.

Koren Helbig is a freelance journalist and sustainable city living educator who practices permaculture and grows organic food in the backyard of her small urban Tarntanya/Adelaide home.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Four games we are pumped to play in 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

Each year the games industry reaches new highs and 2026 is no exception. With the release of long-awaited sequels like GTA VI and new exciting titles like Marvels Wolverine, gamers are spoiled for choice this year.

Marvel’s Wolverine

This video is hosted on Youtube.

Why we like playing games that let us pretend to work

After the the success of the Marvel’s Spider-Man video game series, comic book fans and gamers are excited for developer Insomniac Games to take a crack at the beloved comic book character, Wolverine. First announced four years ago, the gameplay trailer was the highlight of last year’s Playstation State of Play.

Wolverine is a change of pace from the friendly neighbourhood Spider-Man, and it seems Insomniac has captured the dark and gritty tone of his story. His berserker rage, rapid healing and classic adamantium claws feature in some brutally cinematic combat that won’t be suitable for all ages. It’s also exciting to see writer Walt Williams, known for the compelling narrative of Spec Ops: The Line, a game that wonderfully makes players question their morality, contributing to the story of this iconic anti-hero.

The game will likely include heroes and villains from the X-Men universe like Mystique, Omega Red and the Sentinels. Gamers are rightfully concerned that creating a compelling gameplay loop around an immortal protagonist is challenging, and I can’t wait to see how Insomniac will tackle it.

Release Date: 2026, Platform: PlayStation 5.

Control Resonant

This video is hosted on Youtube.

Control Resonant is the sequel to Remedy Entertainment’s multi-award-winning Control. In this game, you play as Dylan Faden, the brother of the previous game’s protagonist.

Dylan has spent years in confinement at the hands of the Federal Bureau of Control (FBC), a US government body that investigates world altering supernatural events. The game begins as his former captors deploy him at the peak of a supernatural crisis in Manhattan that defies nature, physics, and reality.

Using Dylan’s new powers and a shape-shifting weapon that can switch between dual blades and a giant hammer, you must fight creatures created by the corrupting Hiss, invasive micro-organisms called the Mold, and other para-natural threats.

Players have some influence over how the story progresses; each pathway influences how he grows, changing the playstyle accordingly. This sequel pivots the gameplay from a third person shooter to an action hack and slash adventure. The change of gameplay makes it suitable for new and returning players. Check out the announcement trailer during last year’s Game Awards which showcases an expansive game world, stunning graphics and a soundtrack that gave me chills.

Release Date: 2026, Platform: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X and Series S, Windows.

Phantom Blade 0

This video is hosted on Youtube.

Developed by the Beijing based studio, S-Game’s debut title, Phantom Blade 0 is a highly anticipated action-adventure role playing wuxia (a popular Chinese genre of historical fantasy focused on martial arts) game. Dubbed “Kungfupunk” by director Soulframe Liang, it features a unique aesthetic that combines steampunk, cyberpunk with traditional Kungfu.

In this game you play as an assassin named Soul, who’s on the run after being framed for killing his master, the patriarch of an organisation called The Order. Soul has 66 days to unravel the conspiracy and clear his name while being hunted by his former comrades.

The game draws inspiration from old-school wuxia cinema, with combat rooted in classic Chinese martial art philosophy. It’s a unique genre of action game with elements from soulslike and hack-n-slash games, with combat design that weaves traditional martial arts with cyberpunk and steam punk elements.

The director’s passion in every interview has me pumped for Phantom Blade 0. I hope they can deliver on their vision and create an experience that feels like you’re in a classic Kungfu movie. If not for GTA VI, this would’ve been my most anticipated game of 2026.

Release Date: 9 Sep 2026 Platform: Windows, PlayStation 5

GTA VI

This video is hosted on Youtube.

The sequel to the epic open-world crime adventure with iconic gameplay, sharp humour and social commentary was delayed to late 2026. Slated to be the game of 2025, it only fueled the running joke that it would never be released. We now have an official release date, and fans are itching to taste what Rockstar has spent over a billion dollars and 10 years cooking.

The second trailer shows us a Bonnie and Clyde dynamic between the protagonist duo Jason and Luci. Partners in love and crime, fresh out of prison, starting off a new chapter in their life. We can also expect more of the rich, vibrant game world setting of Vice City (fictional Florida) and glimpses of some epic and exciting action sequences. There’s a whole new cast of characters on the game’s website that seem well fleshed out and eerily similar to pop culture icons of the last decade.

Much of what we know comes from insider info, leaks, and speculation. Given Rockstar’s track record with GTA and Red Dead Redemption, the billion-dollar question is: will it live up to the hype and dominate gaming and pop culture like all its prequels?

Release Date: 19 November 2026, Platform: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X and Series S (Windows TBD).

Rockstar Games’ GTA VI artwork with character Jason and Lucia.

Rockstar Games

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Nikki Glaser’s best jokes from the 2026 Golden Globes

Source: Radio New Zealand

In a world full of mediocre Hollywood sequels, Nikki Glaser, returning to host the Golden Globes for a second year running, proved Sunday that reboots can sometimes work.

As stars visibly braced themselves for their moment under her spotlight, Glaser’s 10-minute opening monologue was full of snappy, self-aware jokes that gently skewered every part of Hollywood, from its celebrities and movies to its media companies and obsession with staying young.

Some jokes poked fun at familiar topics like George Clooney’s Nespresso ads or the age of Leonardo DiCaprio’s girlfriends or Kevin Hart’s height, but there were plenty of other gags in there, too.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Golden Globes 2026: All the winners

Source: Radio New Zealand

Here is the full list of winners from the 2026 Golden Globe Awards.

The latest winner will be added to the top. Refresh this page to stay up to date.

Teyana Taylor attends the 83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton on January 11, 2026 in Beverly Hills, California.

Amy Sussman / Getty Images / AFP

All the looks from the Golden Globes red carpet

Source: Radio New Zealand

The countdown is on for the 83rd Golden Globes, the first major film and TV awards show of the season, as stars hit the red carpet. Top nominees include Leonardo DiCaprio, Timothée Chalamet, Michael B. Jordan, Cynthia Erivo and Emma Stone, with leading TV contenders The Pitt, The White Lotus and Severance. Comedian Nikki Glaser hosts this year’s ceremony, with red carpet coverage streaming on Variety’s YouTube channel.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

What exactly are American ICE agents and what can they do?

Source: Radio New Zealand

An ICE agent stands nearby while federal agents detain a protester near the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on 9 January 2026. CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP

Explainer – America has been in an uproar the past week over the actions of ICE agents – Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers – after the shooting death of a US citizen.

The death last week of 37-year-old Minneapolis woman Renee Nicole Good raised more questions about what exactly ICE agents are, and what they can do.

The shooting, captured on video, has fired up protests around America, strong defences of ICE agent actions by US President Donald Trump and others, and stirred concerns about accountability and the use of force. It’s also signalled increased conflicts between federal – the broader American government – and state and local authorities.

Here is what we know about ICE agents and the powers they have.

Federal agents block people protesting an ICE immigration raid at a nearby licensed cannabis farm on 10 July 2025 near Camarillo, California. MARIO TAMA / AFP

What are ICE agents? Are they police? Or are they soldiers?

They’re neither, exactly. They are part of the US Department of Homeland Security and are immigration enforcement agents. That means they’re federal law enforcement charged with investigating illegal immigration and removing violators.

Under Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration, ICE has expanded significantly and carried out immigration enforcement activity in cities all around the country including Minneapolis, Portland, Chicago and Los Angeles.

“ICE is a paramilitary organisation with powers of arrest and detention under its own set of rules,” said Paul Buchanan, a New Zealand-based security and defence analyst.

Buchanan said there’s nothing quite like ICE in New Zealand law enforcement.

“NZ has no equivalent, nor do many other countries that have gendarmes and/or military police because ICE does not engage in usual police activities such as crime-fighting, traffic law enforcement, etc,” he said.

“Like the US Marshals, they act as uniformed bounty-hunters, minus the bounty and with immigrants rather than fugitives from justice as their prey.”

US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem speaks during a press conference to discuss ICE operations in New York City on 8 January 2026. TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP

What’s their history?

ICE was formed after the September 2001 terrorist attacks in the US, as part of the Homeland Security Act of 2002. That act created the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), of which ICE is a subsidiary.

The initial focus of the DHS was preventing foreign terrorism, but it has changed quite a lot under Trump. Immigration enforcement isn’t new – former President Barack Obama was called the “deporter-in-chief” by some rights groups and more than 3 million were deported during his terms in office. But the raids and action seen across large American cities is an escalation.

“Its focus has shifted from counter-terrorism to a much more broad, some would say amorphous concept of immigration law enforcement,” Buchanan said.

Last year, Trump signed a budget bill that included a massive increase to an overall US$170 billion (NZ$305b) toward federal immigration enforcement agencies, of which $75b (NZ$130b) is going to ICE over the next four years.

A federal ICE agent monitors the scene as protestors gather near the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on 9 January 2026. CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP

The current Secretary of Homeland Security in charge of the department is Kristi Noem, the former governor of North Dakota.

ICE agents are not quite the same as Customs officials or the US Border Patrol, which is also part of the Department of Homeland Security, although they all can deal with issues at the border or with immigration.

Border Patrol generally works within 100 miles (160km) of the US border and they have broad powers to stop, question and search individuals and vehicles within that limit without warrants or probable cause. However, they must still satisfy the requirements of the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures.

A man seeking asylum from Colombia is detained by federal agents as he attends his court hearing in immigration court at the Jacob K. Javits Federal Building on 27 October 2025 in New York City. MICHAEL M. SANTIAGO / AFP

What are ICE agents allowed to do?

The frequently viral images and video of masked, armed ICE agents taking people into custody around America have surprised many.

“When compared to local law enforcement and other federal security agencies like the FBI, Secret Service, Capitol Police, Military Police and US Marshals, they have extremely broad and discretionary coercive powers,” Buchanan said.

ICE agents do not need judicial warrants to make arrests, although they are not allowed to enter private homes without warrants. They have made arrests in public areas such as parking lots or apartment building lobbies.

“All aliens who violate US immigration law are subject to arrest and detention, regardless of their criminal histories,” ICE states on its website.

“Like all other law enforcement officers, ICE officers and agents can initiate consensual encounters and speak with people, briefly detain aliens when they have reasonable suspicion that the aliens are illegally present in the United States, and arrest people they believe are illegal aliens,” the site goes on to explain.

There have been lawsuits accusing ICE of racial profiling in their sweeps of American cities which have made their way to the US Supreme Court – which ruled in September those raids could continue.

In some cases ICE agents can even arrest US citizens if they interfere with their duties, but they aren’t supposed to place them in immigration detention – although this has reportedly happened in some cases anyway.

Businesses boarded up in parts of Minneapolis display posters of Renee Nicole Good on plywood-covered windows. KEREM YUCEL / AFP

What about the use of force?

According to data assembled by The Trace, an independent journalism website that focuses on American gun violence, there have been 16 incidents where immigration agents opened fire since the beginning of Trump’s second term last January. Four people have been killed.

A DHS policy memo from 2023 – before Trump’s return to the White House – states that federal officers “may use deadly force only when necessary” when they have “a reasonable belief that the subject of such force poses an imminent threat of death or serious bodily injury” to themself or another person.

That policy memo also states employees should be trained in “de-escalation tactics and techniques.”

Notably in the case of Renee Good, that memo also says DHS officers and agents are “prohibited from discharging firearms at the operator of a moving vehicle … unless the use of deadly force against the operator is justified under the standards articulated elsewhere in this policy.”

The Trump administration says that force was justified in the case of Good, but protesters and many Minneapolis officials vehemently disagree.

ICE agents aren’t required to wear body cameras or provide badge numbers, Axios has reported.

Federal law enforcement agents during a demonstration over the fatal shooting of Renee Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, Minnesota. OCTAVIO JONES / AFP

What qualifications do you need to join ICE?

There’s no requirement to have law enforcement or military experience to be an ICE agent, although many of its employees do have some background in those areas.

According to ICE’s website, its deportation officers are only required to be a US citizen, have a driver’s license and be eligible to carry a firearm. You are not required to have a university degree. For some positions, even a high school diploma is not required.

Would-be ICE agents are required to take about eight weeks of training in topics such as firearms, immigration law and managing crises, for six days a week.

In 2018, the training at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Georgia lasted 20 weeks, but DHS has since cut that back to eight weeks, the Washington Post reported, with DHS saying in a statement that it was “to cut redundancy and incorporate technology advancements.”

An image on the ICE recruitment government website. Screenshot

A press release in August announced ICE would waive age limits for new applicants “so even more patriots will qualify to join ICE in its mission to arrest murderers, pedophiles, gang members, rapists, and other criminal illegal aliens from America’s streets.” It also is offering up to US$50,000 (NZ$87,000) signing bonuses and enhanced benefits, with the agency at one point reporting more than 150,000 applications.

The agency has been on a major hiring spree since last year. It is reportedly aiming to spend US$100m over the next year on what it’s calling a “wartime recruitment” drive, including “people who have attended UFC fights, listened to patriotic podcasts, or shown an interest in guns and tactical gear,” the Washington Post reported.

The issue of their training and “rules of engagement” is critical, Buchanan said.

Masked federal agents stand in a hallway at the New York Federal Plaza Immigration Court inside the Jacob K. Javitz Federal Building in New York on 22 December, 2025. CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP

Why do they wear masks?

ICE agents are typically seen in public wearing face masks, which until recently has not been common among US police.

The US government allows this to prevent public doxxing “which can (and has) placed them and their families at risk,” the ICE website says.

The argument has been that ICE agents are being “outed” on social media, Buchanan said.

“DHS says that this is required because ICE agents face exposure and retaliation if their identities are revealed, which is something that the current administration is reiterating when justifying the murder of an unarmed US citizen by an ICE agent in Minneapolis…

“No other law enforcement agency in the US has this degree of non-transparency.”

Defending masking, DHS has claimed in media statements that there has been a “1300 percent increase in assaults, a 3200 percent increase in vehicular attacks against them and an 8000 percent increase in death threats” which it blamed on “radical rhetoric by sanctuary politicians.”

However, some analysis by American media contradicts that claim.

Buchanan said ICE agent masking stands out from other American agencies.

“Even the FBI and US Marshals have to announce who they are and why they are conducting operations (and have warrants in order to have legal authority to do so), and there are laws in place that make malicious revealing of a federal security agency employee a felony (say, by doxxing or other forms of social media “outing”).

“So the level of ICE opaqueness is extraordinary, especially in peacetime.”

States and the wider government are increasingly in conflict on the issue of masks. California passed a law banning law enforcement including ICE from wearing masks that took effect on January 1, although it’s being challenged by the Trump administration and will face court hearings.

Protesters gather in front of the White House during a protest against the shooting death of Renee Nicole Good on 8 January 2026 in Washington, DC. HEATHER DIEHL / AFP

Are ICE agents being held to the same standards other law enforcement officials are?

That’s the big question after the death of Renee Nicole Good.

Noem has said that as she drove away from ICE officers, Good “weaponised her car” in a “domestic terror attack”. But plentiful video was shot at the scene of the incident, which is still under investigation.

Democrats are pushing for a variety of measures to rein in ICE, but as Republicans control both houses of Congress and the White House, it’s uncertain if any will pass.

Buchanan said there are many questions about ICE’s actions and accountability.

“In my opinion ICE has too much discretionary authority and too loose controls over the use of force, including lethal force.

“Besides concerns that ICE is turning into Trump’s private militia under the guise of being a public security agency, the way in which ICE operates almost inevitably sets up a clash with local government and law enforcement.”

The FBI is leading the investigation into the Minnesota shooting and after an initial agreement for a joint federal-state probe, announced it would block state investigators from participating in it.

Typically, federal and local authorities work together on prominent cases.

The Good case has seen a flurry of activity from the Trump administration defending ICE actions and a flood of protests against it.

In a press conference, Vice President JD Vance blamed the “far left” for attacks on law enforcement and said the killing of Good was a “tragedy of her own making.”

But Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey had strong words after Good’s death last week: “I have a message for ICE: Get the f- out of Minneapolis. We do not want you here.”

AFP / Charly Triballeau

Buchanan warned of the possibility of “mini civil wars” in places where the backlash against ICE is extreme, as local government and communities push back against some of the Trump administration agenda.

“When ICE shows up and starts raiding, detaining, injuring and now killing people in jurisdictions where the local communities and government do not want them there, that sets up a confrontations dynamic that is pernicious in the extreme.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Ten movies we can’t wait to see in 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

As a new year of cinema beckons, we look to the upcoming releases inspiring the most excitement.

Sentimental Value

This video is hosted on Youtube.

Norwegian writer/director Joachim Trier received rapturous plaudits for his wonderful, humanist comedy drama The Worst Person in the Worldthree years ago, and his follow-up movie has been getting a similar reception since premiering at Cannes earlier this year.

It sees Trier reunite with Worst star Renate Reinsve for a story about two sisters dealing with their estranged filmmaker father, played by the great Stellan Skarsgård. January 8.

Marty Supreme

This video is hosted on Youtube.

Timothée Chalamet’s ascension to major leading man status continues with this odd-sounding movie that has already been hailed by many as the best of 2025. Like many would-be Oscar contenders, the international rollout is somewhat delayed to benefit from buzz, so we get it this year.

Chalamet plays an aspiring ping pong champion in New York in the 1950s. We’ve all been waiting for a ping pong movie, we just didn’t know it. January 15.

Crime 101

This video is hosted on Youtube.

Despite the punishingly generic title, all the elements are in place for this crime thriller: it’s adapted from a novella by acclaimed crime writer Don Winslow (City on Fire, Cartel), and features a heavyweight cast in the form of Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffallo, Barry Keoghan and Halle Berry.

It concerns a career criminal (Hemsworth) eyeing one last score, naturally. February 12.

Mārama

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New Zealand-born, England-based filmmaker Taratoa Stappard makes his feature directorial debut with this “Māori gothic” film set in 1859 England (but filmed in New Zealand), and follows the titular young Māori woman (played by Ariana Osborne) as she fights to reclaim her identity and culture in the midst of Aotearoa’s colonial upheaval. The chills-inducing trailer bodes very well. February 12.

The Devil Wears Prada 2

This video is hosted on Youtube.

Stars Anne Hathaway, Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci, director David Frankel and screenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna all return for this twenty years-later sequel to the beloved comedy hit.

I am most intrigued to see how they factor in the massive reduction in the power of magazines in our culture. April 30.

Disclosure Day

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Based on a UFO-centric original idea by Steven Spielberg, which was then turned into a screenplay by one of his go-to-guys, David Koepp (Jurassic Park, War of the Worlds), this mysterious project stars Josh O’Connor, Emily Blunt and Colin Firth and remained unnamed until just recently. The prospect of Spielberg being back in popcorn blockbuster mode is very exciting indeed. June 12.

Moana

This video is hosted on Youtube.

Although I’m generally against Disney’s live action remakes of its own animated titles, the pure Aotearoa New Zealand-iness of Moana means I can’t help but be excited to see this Pacific Island fairy tale come to vivid life. July 9.

The Odyssey

This video is hosted on Youtube.

After showing that a biopic about a physicist could make a billion dollars at the box office, Christopher Nolan (Oppenheimer) has chosen to follow that up by adapting one of the most iconic stories in human history.

Matt Damon plays Odysseus, who just wants to go home, and is surrounded by a horse-load (sorry) of major stars that only Nolan could attract. With Nolan’s refreshing emphasis on the physical filmmaking (as opposed to digital), the epicness here is guaranteed to be epic indeed. July 16.

The Social Reckoning

Screenwriter Aaron Sorkin takes on directing duties as well for this follow-up to his (and director David Fincher’s) acclaimed origins-of-Facebook drama The Social Network (2010).

This one apparently…reckons…with how Facebook/social media resulted in the rise of you-know-who and helped propel the world into its current state of rapidly escalating chaos. Succession’s Jeremy Strong plays Mark Zuckerberg this time. October 8.

Dune: Part Three

This video is hosted on Youtube.

The first two Dune movies covered only the first book, so this third film will take its cues from the second book, Dune Messiah, when things started to get really weird, and author Frank Herbert’s points about leadership really began to coalesce.

So it’s, you know, timely. Robert Pattinson joins the cast as the villain. It’s impossible to imagine anyone but Denis Villeneuve pulling off the first two, so thankfully, the Canadian director is returning. December 17.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Million-dollar Golden Globes’ gift bag includes luxury New Zealand lodge stays

Source: Radio New Zealand

Winners and presenters at this year’s Golden Globes — the first major awards show of the year and a key indicator of Oscar frontrunners — will be handed a gift bag worth nearly US$1 million (NZ$1.75m).

Packed inside an Atlas-branded duffle are 35 luxury items and experiences, though not every recipient will take home every prize. Among the most extravagant offerings are nine ultra-rare bottles of French wine (available to one person only), two tickets to a lavish Jubilee event at the Liber Pater estate in Bordeaux (also for one person), and gold-infused shampoo and conditioner for three recipients.

Travel dominates the haul, with 18 global getaways on offer — including 21 tickets to two high-end New Zealand lodges.

One lucky recipient will receive a six-night stay valued at $31,307 across Canterbury’s Flockhill, Queenstown’s ROKI and Wānaka‘s Minaret. Another 20 recipients will each enjoy a four-night stay at Wharekauhau Country Estate, a 90-minute drive from Wellington, complete with a private winemaker dinner, valued at $14,450 per stay.

The gifts are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis, allowing celebrities to pick and choose. Potential recipients include nominees such as Leonardo DiCaprio, Dwayne Johnson, Cynthia Erivo, George Clooney, Helen Mirren, Jennifer Lawrence, Julia Roberts and Timothée Chalamet.

“I just do my farm tour the same way I always would do it. And, yeah, sometimes you do see guests walking past the yards and things like that and they’ll have security with them.

“It doesn’t change my day, really, you just carry on.”

Last year, Wharekauhau was also awarded two Michelin Keys, part of an international rating system recognising the world’s most exceptional hotels.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand