March 19 marks Bruce Willis’ first birthday since he and his family shared their diagnosis of frontotemporal dementia, and his wife Emma Heming Willis honored the day by sharing her feelings of grief. In an emotional video post on instagramThe CocoBaba founder spoke about how difficult the day was, and also noted that she hopes that by sharing her experience with others in similar situations, she will feel more comfortable opening up.
“Today is my husband’s birthday. I started the morning with tears, as you can see from my puffy eyes and runny nose,” she said at the beginning of her video. “I just think it’s important that you see all sides of it.”
Emma continued, “I always get this message or people always tell me, ‘Oh, you’re so strong. I don’t know how you do it.” I have no choice. I would like to, but I am also raising two children in this. Sometimes in our lives we have to put on our big girls panties and get down to business. And that’s what I do. … But I have times of sadness, every day, grief every day, and I really feel it today, on his birthday.”
She captioned her post with a message to all of Bruce’s fans. “Today is one of those days when I feel grief and sadness. But the upside or downside is that I am so lucky to feel your warmth and love towards my husband and our family,” she wrote. “I see your posts, your stories you share and all I can say is thank you. Your connection helps me and I hope it helps you a little to know that I see you and I also deeply understand your journey. .”
Bruce and Emma have two daughters: 10-year-old Mabel and 8-year-old Evelyn. He also has three adult daughters – Rumer, Scout and Tallulah – with ex-wife Demi Moore. Rumer is expecting her first child later this year.
Scout also shared a lengthy message in honor of her father, who turned 68. “It’s his birthday, so send him all your love, tenderness, care and prayer for a moment!” she wrote along with an old photo from her childhood. on instagram. “Happy birthday to one of my best friends, Pisces King, master of duality, action hero icon, and baby girl’s affectionate dad. What a privilege to have this man as my father and learn so much about life, joy, mischief and art. through him”.
She added that the Die Hard star’s birthday was “not necessarily an easy day” but that “grief is the price I will always pay to know what it’s like to feel this kind of love.” Scout concluded her post by writing, “I send my love to all who have ever felt ability stretched by the immensity of love and the humanity of grief. I love you”.
The entire Willis family revealed the actor’s diagnosis in a group statement in February. “Bruce always found joy in life – and helped everyone he knew do the same. It meant that the whole world saw that this feeling of caring responded to him and to all of us. We were so touched by the love you all shared for our dear husband, father and friend during this difficult time,” they said. “Your continued compassion, understanding and respect will enable us to help Bruce live his life to the fullest.”
A Canadian documentary filmmaker whose film helped police crack one of the art world’s biggest fraud cases has been forced to hand over source material to Ontario police as part of a production order.
Jamie Kastner is the director of the 2019 documentary No Fakes, which exposes a fraudulent network that passed off fake paintings as originals by famed indigenous artist Norval Morrisseau, known for his colorful paintings depicting the natural world and indigenous mythology. . The eye-opening film, which premiered at Toronto’s Hot Docs, revealed that there were 10 times more Morrisseau fakes on the market than real works, and that the artist’s own nephew may have been involved in facilitating the production of fakes.
The film’s release inspired investigators in Thunder Bay, Ontario to investigate the case, and in early March police made eight arrests and 40 charges in addition to confiscating 1,000 fake Morrisseau paintings. However, as part of the ongoing investigation, investigators also placed a production order on Kastner, a legally enforceable order that ordered the director to hand over all source material. The director and his lawyer are now fighting to ensure that documents that have not yet been opened are sealed.
“We have to fight this because it goes against the basics of journalistic freedom and the need to protect our sources,” Kastner says. Diversity. “If talking to documenters and journalists becomes synonymous with talking to the police, no one will ever talk to us.”
Diversity understands that the authorities conducted a 2.5-year investigation into this case involving more than 90 police officers from different jurisdictions. They are believed to have taken 271 applications – compared to 17 interviews Kastner gave for the film.
“They interviewed the vast majority of people in my film, independently of each other,” Kastner says. “I don’t understand how they can claim they can’t get information in any other way when they were interviewed themselves.”
A likely scenario is that the police want to cross-reference the statements he made with material obtained by Kastner years ago to ensure consistency. Both Thunder Bay Police and the Ontario Provincial Police, also known as the OPP, who are jointly investigating, declined to comment on the story or explain their reasons for the seizure of the footage.
In the picture, from left to right: Norval Morrisseau’s fake painting “Spiritual Energy of Mother Earth” from which the investigation began; Jamie Kastner
Kastner’s attorney, Ian McKinnon, is a partner at Linden & Associates, a Toronto law firm specializing in media and intellectual property law. Diversity the case is likely to be an “uphill battle”, especially since Kastner’s sources are not confidential and were openly interviewed in the film.
The team disputes the production order and hope to obtain an affidavit from the police outlining their reasons for the production order to go to court. (The court must be satisfied that there are good legal grounds for making an order to testify under oath.) McKinnon also hopes that the Journalist Source Protection Act, a major amendment to the Canadian Penal Code that came into force in 2017, will help the filmmaker’s case.
The JSPA serves to protect the privacy of journalistic sources and helps protect a journalist’s right to privacy when collecting or disseminating information. The law is also a two-part test: first, it requires the police and the Crown not to establish a reasonable alternative means of obtaining information, and second, that the public interest in prosecuting the crime for which material is being sought outweighs the interests of the journalist . interested in privacy in protecting their work.
However, McKinnon, referring to two recent Canadian media cases, R. v. CBC and R vs. Virtanen, who has tried and failed to use the JSPA, admits that “more often than not, courts favor the police because they feel that if it has anything to do with prosecution of defendants, they are quick to crack down on journalists’ rights.”
The lawyer, however, warns of the “chilling” effect that production orders on journalists and documentary makers could have on the media landscape.
“Interviewees may be willing to be interviewed by a journalist, but they may not want to talk to the police for their own good reasons,” McKinnon says. “If people start thinking that every time they talk to a journalist, [the journalist’s] records and records will be turned over to the police and used against them, they may be less willing to speak.”
Another major problem is that the police will begin to view journalists as just another tool for investigating crimes, and reporters will not be seen as independent police watchdogs.
“Journalists may have to start destroying records and records they need for their own protection if someone comes back and sues them,” McKinnon says. “This puts journalists in a very difficult position.”
David F. Sandberg and Rachel Zegler Urge Critics of Shazam! Fury of the Gods” on Twitter.
Superhero sequel by New Line Cinema and Warner Bros. debuted in theaters over the weekend and grossed a disappointing $30.5 million, beating relatively modest expectations of $35 million.
This makes him one of the worst opening weekend performers for the DC Comics franchise, ahead of only Wonder Woman 1984 and The Suicide Squad. both came out during the pandemic and were made available for streaming immediately upon release.
On Rotten Tomatoes, The Tomatometer received a critical acclaim of 53% on Monday afternoon, with an audience score of 88%.
Rachel Zegler, who plays Anthea, Atlas’ youngest daughter, in the Shazam sequel, reacted to this weekend’s poor box office performance by urging people on Twitter to give the film a shot.
“Hey, our movie is really good!” Zegler tweeted Saturday. “but mostly I just really enjoyed doing it and the people I met doing it 🙂 go and see! give it a chance. we have 85% of the audience for a reason.”
“Some people out there are just… needlessly mean” she continued. “And it’s unnecessary. and I know, I know, “if you can’t handle the heat…” and all that nonsense, and you’re right. but our film is actually very good. it’s just cool to hate fun these days. This is fine. were good.”
On Monday, director David F. Sandberg also lamented the reaction to the film, tweeting that it had just received the “lowest critic score” for Rotten Tomatoes and the “highest audience score for the same film.”
One thing I was really looking forward to was to disconnect from the superhero discourse on the internet. A lot of this stresses me so much, and it would be great not to think about it anymore.
“Critically, I didn’t expect a repeat of the first movie, but I was still a little surprised because I think it’s a good movie. Well, the Swedish filmmaker. tweeted.
The first Shazam! The film earned $53.5 million in its opening weekend of 2019.
‘Annabelle: Creation’ director completes his tweet a thread saying that he has no regrets about making “Shazam!” movies “if only for a minute”, but was looking forward to switching off from the stresses of “online superhero discourse” and returning to the horror genre.
Amanda BynesHer parents don’t see her recent psychotic episode as a reason to place her in another care… but that doesn’t mean her episode hasn’t raised alarm.
A source with direct knowledge tells TMZ… Amanda’s parents, Lynn another Rickdeeply concerned about their daughter’s well-being and health following her recent ordeal, but another guardianship is not on the table, at least for now.
Amanda lived on her own in her own home, took beauty courses, and seemed to be doing well until recently, so Sunday’s episode seemed like an anomaly.
We were told that her parents also take comfort in the fact that Amanda was self-aware enough to know she was in trouble… stopped the car to call for help and called 911 herself.
TMZ told the story, Amanda was placed in a psychiatric hospital 5150 after she was spotted naked outside downtown Los Angeles on Sunday morning.
She was taken to the nearest police station and the psychiatric team deemed it necessary to conduct a psychological detention. Typically, 5150 Holds last only 72 hours, but they can be extended.
As you know, Amanda was in care for almost a decade, starting in 2013 while struggling with her mental health. The fork was strung on her guardianship a year ago tomorrow.