Senin, 22 April 2019

‘Game of Thrones’ star Maisie Williams opens up about sex scene that shocked viewers - Fox News

“Game of Thrones” showrunners threw in a sex scene in Sunday night’s episode that many fans didn’t see coming.

The night before the epic battle against the White Walkers, several characters spent time coping with what could be their last few hours alive. For 18-year-old Arya Stark, it was losing her virginity to Gendry, a former travel partner who is the bastard son of late King Robert Baratheon. Both of them were in their teens when they last saw each other.

“We’re going to die soon. I’d like to know what it’s like before that happens,” Arya, played by Maisie Williams, 22, told Gendry, played by 31-year-old Joe Dempsie, in reference to having sex.

[WARNING: THE FOLLOWING CONTAINS SPOILERS FROM SEASON 8 OF "GAME OF THRONES"]

Fans have been rooting for an Arya and Gendry romance since the duo first met in Season 1 and began traveling together in the next season — but the unexpected sex scene still shocked fans and left some cringing.

“Running to google to check Maisie Williams’ age to make sure I didn’t break the law by having my eyes open,” one Twitter user wrote.

'GAME OF THRONES' FINAL SEASON LAS VEGAS ODDS REVEAL BIZARRE THEORIES ABOUT HBO HIT

“Google: Maisie Williams’ age; 22 #GameOfThrones,” another person tweeted.

Another person tweeted, “ARYA SAID I SEE IT, I LIKE IT, I WANT IT, I GOT IT#GameofThrones”

“#GameofThrones Nobody: [no response], Arya: I ain't tryna die a virgin!” a fan wrote.

“Me watching Arya and Gendry about to get it on even though I pretty much watched Arya grow up,” another tweet read.

Williams opened up about her first “GOT” sex scene to Entertainment Weekly, saying co-star Sophie Turner was the first to alert her about it.

“Sophie said, ‘Whatever you do, you have to skip to this episode, this scene first.’ So I just read that and it was practically all I knew about the entire season,” Williams told Entertainment Weekly.

“At first, I thought it was a prank,” Williams added. “I was like, ‘Yo, good one.’ And [the showrunners were] like, ‘No, we haven’t done that this year.’ Oh f—k!”

'GAME OF THRONES' ACTOR RICHARD MADDEN SHOCKS FANS WITH SEASON 1 THROWBACK OF KIT HARINGTON, ALFIE ALLEN

Williams said it sank in she was going to be in a sex scene by the final season table read.

“I got to the read-through and I’m reading the scene and thought, ‘Oh, we’re actually going to do this. When do I shoot this? I need to go to the gym.’ A whole list of things,” she said.

Maisie Williams portraying Arya Stark in "Game of Thrones."

Maisie Williams portraying Arya Stark in "Game of Thrones." (HBO via AP)

Williams, who was 11 when she first joined the show, said everyone on set was respectful when it came to filming the scene. She added that by the end they were rushing to finish filming the moment.

“David [Benioff] and Dan [Weiss] were like: ‘You can show as much or as little as you want. So I kept myself pretty private. I don’t think it’s important for Arya to flash. This beat isn’t really about that. And everybody else has already done it on the show, so…” Williams said.

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Dempsie also said the experience was strange for him.

“It’s obviously slightly strange for me because I’ve known Maisie since she was 11, 12 years old,” Dempsie told Entertainment Weekly. “At the same time, I don’t want to be patronizing toward Maisie — she’s a 20-year-old woman. So we just had a lot of fun with it.”

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https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/game-of-thrones-maisie-williams-sex-scene

2019-04-22 12:55:38Z
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On Game of Thrones, Everyone Gets Ready to Fight the Dead...and to Die - Gizmodo

Jaime (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) makes a stand.
Photo: All images: Helen Sloan (HBO)

We didn’t need seven seasons of shocking character deaths to know that not all our favorite characters are going to survive the battle against the White Walkers. It turns out very few characters on the show have any illusions about staying alive either, so they have to choose how to spend their final day before the dead arrive on their doorstep. It makes for a very bleak episode, but a damned good one, too.

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After last week’s rocky season premiere, I am very happy to report that things are much, much improved. While last week’s episode often felt rushed to the point of incoherence, “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” has nothing but time—time to stay with those gathered at Winterfell as they get ready to fight a war no one much expects to win…but are forced to wait for that war to arrive and reckon with their probable demises. All of those thoughtful character moments that have made the series so special and were almost completely lacking in the premiere? It turns out they were all here.

Compare anything from last week with the beginning of last night’s episode, in which everyone decides what the hell to do with Jaime. Just about all the main characters get a chance to weigh in and let us know how they feel about his arrival. Daenerys is ready to kill the traitor who murdered her father, Sansa is also ready to punish the man who attacked her father in season one, Brienne vouches for Jaime’s honor and tells of his good deeds when they were together, and Tyrion hopes to save his brother while being on Daenerys’ bad side for getting utterly duped by Cersei. Best of all is Jaime’s frequent, desperate looks at Bran, wondering if he’s going to mention how Jaime pushed him off that tower all those years ago, but only getting Bran’s uncomfortable Three-Eyed Raven stare in return. None of this needed to be seen—we all knew Jaime wasn’t going to be killed, because he’s obviously going to fight alongside the good guys—but it felt natural and real, in that way that makes Game of Thrones so special.

And that was just the first scene! Jaime then got time to talk to Bran alone, and discover Bran has no hard feelings (he has no feelings at all, really) and that by pushing a kid out that window Jaime accidentally set himself on a road to becoming a better person. Jaime and Tyrion also get to spend some alone time together, marveling at how two Lannisters have somehow both ended up fighting for the Starks in Winterfell. And then when Jaime and Brienne reunite, he tells her he’d be honored if he could serve under her when the fighting starts.

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Tyrion (Peter Dinklage) enjoys his fifth of 18 drinks.

Honestly, it’s almost a little obnoxious that so many characters get so much time to process Jaime’s arrival when so many major moments were jam-packed into the show last week, but it’s these scenes where the characters don’t have plot duties that really stand out.

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Sansa and Daenerys finally get to have a private conversation and it’s everything I wanted; from Daenerys’ too-friendly overtures to the two women bonding over the perils of the patriarchy to Sansa’s utter refusal to forget that when the war is over the fate of Winterfell and the North is still in the queen’s hands. Tyrion and Jaime, drinking and regretting the “perils of self-betterment” was outstanding. Sansa’s palpable happiness at seeing fellow Ramsay survivor Theon again was much briefer, but also satisfying. Even the mini-Night’s Watch reunion of Jon, Samwell, and Edd had a bit of emotional heft.

Not all of it worked, though. Sam giving Jorah his family’s Valyrian sword to fight with didn’t feel particularly earned. The scene where Davos is inexplicably serving food to raw recruits and meets the clichéd “small child who wants to be a soldier” was worthless. And I’m honestly not at all sure how I feel about Arya’s determination to have sex before most likely dying the next day (although to be fair I don’t think Gendry was sure how to feel either).

But the episode is going to be remembered for one scene and one scene alone, and it’s not the one where Jon reveals his true parentage to Daenerys (which conveniently occurs seconds before the White Walkers arrive). It’s when Tyrion and Jaime are drinking, and are slowly joined by Brienne, Podrick, Davos, and Tormund, and then…that’s it, basically. They drink and talk and think about how they’re probably going to die in the very, very near future. These different characters, who have had vastly different journeys, come together and quietly bond in their shared doom, and it’s just marvelous. It honestly didn’t need that cheesy but incredibly satisfying moment when Jaime knights Brienne, but Gwendoline Christie does such an excellent job of conveying Brienne’s emotions while she’s trying desperately to restrain them, and it’s a lovely reminder of how important these scenes are to Game of Thrones—or can be.

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Of course, given that the episode ends with the White Walkers staring at Winterfell, I sincerely doubt we’re in for any more simple, quiet scenes for…well, ever, maybe? The war will clearly begin next week, and I don’t know that there’s much reason to suspect it’ll end anytime before the final episode. That’s fine—it’s what we’ve all been waiting for, after all—and I feel very confident that the spectacles in store are going to blow our minds. But we all needed this episode, not just as the traditional calm before the storm, but as a reminder of what this show is and has been, and why we’re so damn invested in seeing who manages to live through what’s next—however few they may be.

Because right now, the big plan is “kill the Night King and hope they all die” like when they slew the Walker last season and his wights collapsed. Bran will hang out in the Godswood because the Night King hates Three-Eyed Ravens so much he’ll likely head there to attack—at which point Theon and his Iron Islanders will pop up, as, hopefully, will Dany with one of her dragons. It’s not the worst plan, but as Bran points out, no one actually knows if dragon fire can even destroy the Night King. Given that next week is only the third episode of six, I’m guessing…no. It won’t.

Which most likely means some the characters we saw thinking they may be about to die are going to be very, very right. Thank goodness we’ll have this last night to remember them by.

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Davos (Liam Cunningham) takes time out of his incredibly busy day to, uh, serve soup.

Assorted Musings:

  • Jon basically sprinting away from Daenerys every time they were done having a group meeting made me chuckle.
  • For defenses, Winterfell has catapults, plenty of spiked barricades, and a trench they can set on fire. Oh, and nine million dragonglass weapons. Could be worse!
  • Arya’s Gendry-made weapon was a spear with a dragonglass blade at each end. Should make for a pretty action scene.
  • Bran doesn’t care that Jaime threw him out a window and paralyzed him, but Bran also likes to say “The things we do for love” in front of Jaime constantly to make him feel like shit.
  • Holy crap, was that Ghost? (It was.)
  • Holy crap, was that “Jenny of Oldstones”? (It was.)
  • This show cannot make me care about Grey Worm and Missandei, but that didn’t make their decision to make travel plans for after the war any less trite. The only question now is which one of them will die—or will they both?
  • Hey, what the hell was up with Brienne looking to Pod when Jaime offered to knight her, and then Pod barely nodded his approval? Brienne doesn’t need shit from you, Podrick.
  • That was also some very good acting from Emilia Clarke when Jon is telling Dany his origin story. There are lots of conflicting emotions going on at once—and I like how Dany’s first thought is of the Iron Throne, and not the fact she has been having sex with her nephew.
  • That Winterfell war map was hilarious. There’s the keep, the various Winterfell forces, and then basically the entire top half of the board is the Night King’s army. Ha ha, they’re doomed!
  • Samwell, laying down some truth: “Everyone seems to forget I’m the first one to kill a White Walker.”

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2019-04-22 11:30:00Z
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Kim Kardashian's mini-me North West, 5, boogies at father Kanye West's Sunday Service Coachella set - Daily Mail

North West, 5, is the star of the show as she shows off her famous dance moves during dad Kanye West's Sunday Service at Coachella

She frequently displays her impressive dance movies at her father Kanye West's weekly church services.

And North West, five, showed off her fancy footwork once again as she supported her dad Kanye, 41, during his Sunday Service at the Coachella Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California.

The daughter of Kim Kardashian appeared in great spirits as she held hands with her close pal during a stroll along the mountains.

Having fun: North West, five, showed off her fancy footwork once again as she supported her dad Kanye West during his Sunday Service at the Coachella Music and Arts Festival in California

Having fun: North West, five, showed off her fancy footwork once again as she supported her dad Kanye West during his Sunday Service at the Coachella Music and Arts Festival in California

Following in the footsteps of her stylish mother, North sported a lilac unitard, teamed with black slip-on boots.

The celebrity offspring looked adorable as she ditched her curly tresses in favour of Fulani-inspired braids.

Mother-of-three Kim took to her Instagram account to showcase her daughter's new hairdo as they supported Kanye at the star-studded event.

North beamed with delight while watching her father's lively set as she enjoyed a boogie session. 

In good company: The daughter of Kim Kardashian appeared in great spirits as she held hands with her close pal during a stroll along the mountains

In good company: The daughter of Kim Kardashian appeared in great spirits as she held hands with her close pal during a stroll along the mountains

Mini-me: Following in the footsteps of her stylish mother, North sported a lilac unitard, teamed with black slip-on boots

Mini-me: Following in the footsteps of her stylish mother, North sported a lilac unitard, teamed with black slip-on boots

Make like Kim in a ruched maxi skirt by Rick Owens

If there's one celebrity closet we'd love to dig around in, it would be Kim Kardashian's!

From those iconic Herve Leger bandage dresses to her extensive array of Balmain, Yeezy and Thierry Mugler, Kim has amassed quite an impressive collection in her time.

One such covetable piece is this skirt by Rick Owens. Kim has been diving in to the high-end archives recently and Rick Owens is one of her favourites!

We've seen Kim in the white version of this slinky style before (as seen on the Spring/Summer 2003 runway) but the grey version is just as dreamy, which she teamed with a high neck crop top.

Unfortunately us mere mortals can't shop this exact look but thankfully the high-street has delivered in the form of grey maxi skirts aplenty.

From TRU to JD Williams and beyond, scroll through our carousel to unlock Kim's look. Alternatively, click (right) to shop a similar Rick Owens skirt if you want to buy into the Kim K-approved brand.

* PRICES MAY NOT BE AS ADVERTISED
Supportive: Mother-of-three Kim took to her Instagram account to showcase her daughter's new hairdo

Supportive: Mother-of-three Kim took to her Instagram account to showcase her daughter's new hairdo

Fresh style: The celebrity offspring looked adorable as she ditched her curly tresses in favour of Fulani-inspired braids
Fresh style: The celebrity offspring looked adorable as she ditched her curly tresses in favour of Fulani-inspired braids

Fresh style: The celebrity offspring looked adorable as she ditched her curly tresses in favour of Fulani-inspired braids

Closer than ever: She walked along the greenery with her cousin, Kourtney Kardashian and Scott Disick's daughter Penelope, six

 Closer than ever: She walked along the greenery with her cousin, Kourtney Kardashian and Scott Disick's daughter Penelope, six

Lively: North beamed with delight while watching her father's set as she enjoyed a boogie session

Lively: North beamed with delight while watching her father's set as she enjoyed a boogie session

Family affair: North engaged in a conversation with her aunt Khloe Kardashian, 34, during the event

Family affair: North engaged in a conversation with her aunt Khloe Kardashian, 34, during the event

Jesus Walks rapper Kanye switched over to playing his older material after about an hour of the Sunday Service performance.

Fans watching the live stream of the show were dismayed by the choice to broadcast the entire performance through an iris. 

Reality star Kim has described her husband's new creation as more of a 'healing experience' than a religious ceremony. 

Bold: In his signature eccentric fashion, rapper Kanye stood out from the crowd in a quirky bold ensemble, which worked well with his lilac-dyed scalp
Bold: In his signature eccentric fashion, rapper Kanye stood out from the crowd in a quirky bold ensemble, which worked well with his lilac-dyed scalp

Bold: In his signature eccentric fashion, rapper Kanye, 41, stood out from the crowd in a quirky bold ensemble, which worked well with his lilac-dyed scalp

Making a statement: The award-winning musician appeared in great spirits as he performed a series of tracks at the service

Making a statement: The award-winning musician appeared in great spirits as he performed a series of tracks at the service

The make-up mogul said the musical service is intended to be therapeutic for the participants, rather than 'preaching' about religion.

Talking with Elle magazine about the most star studded church gathering ever created, the mother of three said: 'It’s honestly more like a healing experience for my husband. It’s just music; there’s no sermon.' 

'It’s definitely something he believes in - Jesus - and there’s a Christian vibe. But there’s no preaching. It’s just a very spiritual Christian experience,' the reality star said. 

Kim and Kanye share daughter, Chicago, 1, and son, Saint, 3, together and are expecting their fourth bundle of joy via surrogate soon.

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-6946373/Kim-Kardashians-mini-North-West-5-boogies-father-Kanye-Wests-Sunday-Service-Coachella-set.html

2019-04-22 08:45:26Z
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Game of Thrones: Amazon error as second episode is uploaded early - BBC News

The latest episode of Game of Thrones was uploaded to Amazon early due to an "error", the company has said.

The second instalment of the eighth and final series was not supposed to be broadcast until Sunday evening.

But some Amazon Prime members were able to watch it several hours before that.

"We regret that for a short time Amazon customers in Germany were able to access episode two of season eight of Game of Thrones," an Amazon spokesman said.

"This was an error and has been rectified."

It may have been taken down soon after it was uploaded, but it was long enough for many fans to view the whole episode.

As a result, screengrabs and plot details started appearing online before the official broadcast - which led to fans worrying about accidentally coming across spoilers (which we obviously won't post here).

However, plenty of people had some fun with the leak.

US singer Mariah Carey suggested that she was about to post some "major Game of Thrones spoilers" on Twitter... before going on to upload a picture of herself on the Iron Throne.

This is the second week in a row that Game of Thrones has appeared online early.

Last week's launch episode was made available to DirecTV Now customers four hours early.

A spokesman for AT&T, which owns the service, said: "Apparently our system was as excited as we are for Game of Thrones tonight and gave a few DirecTV Now customers early access to the episode by mistake.

"When we became aware of the error, we immediately fixed it and we look forward to tuning in this evening."

Writing in Forbes, Paul Tassi said: "HBO has to be tearing their hair out that this keeps happening, but this show is so popular and there are so many of these markets to manage, it does almost seem inevitable that something will go wrong.

"At least we're not dealing with people flat-out stealing episodes like we saw in a breach a few years ago, but this is not great either."

Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.

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2019-04-22 10:39:41Z
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Game Of Thrones S.8, E.2: Recap NPR - NPR

Tyrion (Peter Dinklage) in his cups (well, goblets, technically) on Game of Thrones. HBO hide caption

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HBO

We're recapping the eighth and final season of Game of Thrones; look for these recaps first thing on Monday mornings. Spoilers, of course, abound.

Here it is, folks, the Great Inward Breath.

Last week's season premiere was all about setting the table — reunions, recriminations, and churning out great big meaty chunks of plot to get everyone up to speed. Now that the table's set, the series decided to take a step back to admire its handiwork — how well they lit the candles and folded the napkins into the shapes of swans or what have you.

Did you notice? Not even a passing glimpse of a dragon. Just scene after scene of people in rooms having conversations — classic, O.G. Thrones, although these conversations came tinged with a wry ruefulness, and a kind of low-key thrum of amazement that any of them made it this far. It was a throwback episode, a bottle episode, a chance to watch these characters make ready for the coming battle.

After last week's onslaught of story points, this episode seemed measured, even contemplative, as it parceled out only a handful of new bits of information that seem likely to prove relevant:

  • The Night King wants Bran, so they'll used him as three-eyed bait.
  • Jon revealed to Daenerys why he's been so ... auntsy.
  • Everyone at Winterfell who will not be fighting the Army of the Dead will be holed up in the crypts, as it's (several characters repeat this, which should raise all sorts of the very reddest of flags) "the safest place." It has evidently occurred to none of these characters that when fighting a foe whose whole freaking schtick is animating corpses, the least safe place to be is a big ol' corpse storage facility. "Oh no we're being chased by a dude with a flame thrower! Let's hide in this fireworks store!"

From here on in, the final four episodes are gonna clock in at about an hour and 20 minutes each, and they're likely to go heavy on dragon-zombie-razzle-dazzle. So let's take some time and appreciate this moment of quiet before the ice storm.

To begin:

The revamped credits take us through Last Hearth and King's Landing again, even though we don't visit them in this episode. Nope, we're all about Winterfell, which gets several new clockwork lines of defense this pass-through, and its clockwork godswood comes equipped with a tree whose face looks an awful lot like Winston Churchill, if you're in the market for World War II parallels.

We open with Jaime Lannister on trial, of sorts. Daenerys is all, "My name is Inigo Montoya, you keeled my father, prepare to die," but Tyrion and Brienne vouch for him. Tyrion's entreaties don't impress Daenerys much — throughout this episode, she regards her counselor like he's a small, stubborn stain — but Brienne makes a convincing case, by invoking the late Catelyn Stark. And if you're sitting there thinking "Aw, what a nice moment between Jaime and Brienne, who share one of the most interesting, nuanced relationships on a show full of nuanced, interesting relationships," boy, just you wait 45 minutes, because damn.

There's a bit at the end of the scene when Dany's like "What say you, Warden of the North?" and Jon Snow's all like, "Hm? Sorry, I was miles away, thinking about how different Auntie Mame would be if Rosalind Russell and the kid who played Patrick were schtupping each other what no reason NO REASON I'm fine what is that the time I gotta go."

Tyrion gets a royal dressing down from Daenerys, as the show makes explicit something that's been implicit for several seasons now — Tyrion isn't as smart as he thinks he is. This means he's due for a nice, redemptive Big Smart Thing That Will Save The Day any episode now, so those of us who've been impatiently waiting for the writers to let Tyrion be Tyrion shouldn't have long to wait.

Forging ahead

Arya visits Gendry in the Winterfell forges, where many, many dragonglass weapons are being made. In a nice callback, she admires his uh ... form, and they share some banter. She asks for details about the Army of the Dead, and Gendry proves an inarticulate storyteller "(They're bad. Very bad.") who jokingly condescends to Arya, all while sporting a bad haircut, which is why you heard so many millions of people yelling "ARYA YOU CAN DO BETTER GIRL" at their televisions at 9:07 ET last night. But the heart wants what it wants, as do the loins, so here we all are, neck deep in ... what are people calling it? Ardry? Genya? I like Ardry, because is sounds like "arduous," which is what this particular ship seems.

Jaime meets Bran in the godswood, and Bran's like, "So, bangs now, hunh?" and Jaime's all, "Yeah I wanted a change I think they frame my face, like yours do, what do you think?" and Bran's all "We're bangs buddies now! And bangs buddies don't hold grudges for throwing each other out tower windows!"

Jaime and Tyrion get a walk-and-talk scene intended, in whole or in part, to quell online questions about whether Cersei is really pregnant (she very is). Jaime stares down over some battlements (which have been newly festooned with defensive dragonglass) at Podrick and Brienne. Jaime and Brienne get a touching exchange in which Jaime asks to serve under Brienne in the coming battle, and if this moment between them touched a soft salty part of you, hoo boy, just wait half an hour.

Daenerys and Jorah Mormont spend some time dutifully inching Tyrion's redemption arc a few inches further down the road. This is followed by a scene in which Daenerys and Sansa get some quality time onscreen together, finally — though as their conversation is dominated by talk of Tyrion and Jon Snow, they manage to fail the Bechdel test so flagrantly, with such verve, elan and aplomb, that they'll need to re-take it after school. (It's a nice scene, though.) "Tell me," Daenerys asks Sansa, pointing out that she's up in the frozen North at Jon Snow's side, when she could be down in King's Landing serving herself up a nice big helping of Cersei en flambe, "Who manipulated whom?" (The fact that she said "whom" instead of "who" right there means she was raised right, and deserves the Iron Throne.)

They are interrupted before Daenerys can answer Sansa's question about the fate of the North, once the battles are over. (It's the first of two times this episode that fate will interrupt her at a crucial time.) Theon shows up, and is warmly welcomed by Sansa — very warmly. Surprisingly warmly, frankly. I mean, sure, he did save her life. But that didn't seem like a "You saved my life" hug.

Crypt-o currency

Davos serves soup — the color and consistency of hot ketchup — to several peasants readying for the coming battle. Gilly assures someone that the crypts are the safest place CLAXON CLAXON CLAXON CLAXON and we meet an adorable moppet who will likely become Victim #1 when ice-zombie Lyanna Stark or whoever comes crawling out of her grave next week.

Dolorous Edd, Beric Dondarrion and Tormund make it back to Winterfell, where battle preparations proceed apace. At a war council held around a big map table that not nearly as cool as the one at Dragonstone, plans are made. Well. Plan, anyway.

The plan, such as it is: Get to the Night King. Who, we learn, has got a thing for Three-Eyed Ravens. Sam gets a nifty little speech about memory, history and the stories we tell, which causes everyone around the table to look at each other meaningfully. Or questioningly. Or amorously, it's hard to tell.

"We'll put you in the crypt," Jon tells Bran, (wait for it!), "where it's safest." "What a stupid idea, I've seen next week's episode," Bran doesn't say.

What he does say is that he'll park his wheelchair in the godswood and wait for the Night King there, defended by Theon. Tyrion wants to fight, but Daenerys orders him to stay in the really no kidding completely absolutely super-duper safe crypts.

After the council, Daenerys tries to connect with Jon, but he disappears, leaving a broody dustcloud behind him and a Jon-Snow-shaped hole in the wall.

"You've had a strange journey," Tyrion says to the creepy goth kid who can see through time and supplant the consciousness of wildlife — two skills he honed via the mentorship of Max Von Sydow the half-tree wizard. "I'd like to hear about it." The scene cuts away then, leaving us to wonder if Bran told Tyrion about his own story alone, or shared some spicy tidbits about the real identity of Jon Snow.

More battle prep. Missandei and Grey Worm make plans for a beach vacation; Jon, Sam and Dolorous Edd (plus Jon's direwolf Ghost!) brood on the battlements, giving the show yet another opportunity to mash the "Gilly and little Sam will be SAFE DOWN IN THE CRYPTS" button. "Think back to where we started," says Sam, transforming the episode's subtext into text.

In the Great Hall of Winterfell, Tyrion and Jaime drink by the fireplace, and reflect on how much they've grown as people. They are joined by Brienne, Podrick, Davos and Tormund. (No Varys, though, which seems like criminal oversight.) Tormund flirts a bit, tells a story about how he got the name Giantsbane (it's what you guessed, pretty much) and demonstrates the kind of table manners that you'd imagine someone who's lived most of his life without tables would possess.

Arya meets the Hound and Beric Dondarrion on the Battlements of Brooding, and once again the series reminds us how far these characters have come — which suggests that some or all of them won't make it through next week's battle. I'm thinking Beric's Done-darrion, at the very least.

Gendry finds Arya in a kind of storage room and gives her the weapon she asked him to build for her. The two of them catch up with each other, and then they really catch up with each other. Like, horizontally. Sweatily. And if you've recently binged every episode in preparation for this final season, and 13-year-old, Season 1 Maisie Williams is fresh in your mind, you will be forgiven for turning your eyes from the screen during this bit.

Knight moves

Back at the Fireside Chat, Tyrion is drunk. Like, "You know bros I think we actually might live through the hordes of ice zombies led by Death himself" drunk.

There follows a scene between Jaime and Brienne that is fueled by, and comments on, and enriches, their complicated history together: Jaime knights Brienne of Tarth. If you can, watch this scene again, and notice just how much Gwendoline Christie is serving you — the tiniest quiver of her lips, at just the right moment, the eyes that glisten but never quite well up. So much passes between them: strength, gratitude, awe, respect, love. When it's done, everyone applauds, because, I mean ... wouldn't you?

Lyanna Mormont refuses to be sent to the crypts "where it's safe" (Hey, show? We get it) by her cousin Jorah, because of course she does. Sam presents Jorah with his family's Valyrian steel sword, which is called Heartsbane. (He does not tell Jorah the story of how it got the name Heartsbane; one assumes it has nothing to do with anyone suckling at anyone else's teat.)

Then Podrick sings a sad song that will put you in the mind of that moment in The Return of the King when the Steward of Gondor orders Pippin to do some emo cabaret while he eats his dinner loudly and slurpily. This turns into a quick montage of our cast of players (including Sansa and Theon, making googly eyes at one another over steaming cups of tea, so goodbye Theon it's been real) that concludes in the Winterfell crypts, which look, not for nothing, just really quite remarkably safe.

Jon is staring at the tomb of his mother, Lyanna Stark. Daenerys approaches him, and he spills the I'm-secretly-a-king-oh-also-we've-been-doing-an-incest beans. She doesn't accept it — because why would she — but Jon is firm. As it were.

Look, it's no secret that the scenes between Emilia Clarke and Kit Harington haven't exactly lit up the screen with big hot sexytime electricity. The show needs them to have it, though, and plows on as if they do — but now that the secret's out, that disconnect will likely fall away. Because the truth is their onscreen chemistry always felt more familial than intended, so at least now we're all on the same page.

Just before Jon can tell Daenerys what his intentions are in re: the Iron Throne, the war horns sound, conveniently enough: White Walkers have been sighted.

White Riders, technically, I suppose, as we get our first and only special effects shot of the episode — a horde of those pasty, icy, long-haired Edgar-Winter-looking zombies massing before Winterfell. No sign of the undead dragon, or the Night King himself, however. He's still in the latrine, presumably, because lord knows he hasn't been getting enough Bran. Though that's about to change.

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https://www.npr.org/2019/04/22/715794928/game-of-thrones-season-8-episode-2-think-back-to-where-we-started

2019-04-22 06:52:00Z
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Minggu, 21 April 2019

Kanye West brings Sunday service to Coachella for Easter - Fox News

As promised, Kanye West brought his “Sunday Service” to Coachella on Easter morning, as dozens of musicians, singers and dancers performed a set of spiritual songs, covers and songs by the rapper himself — including a new one called “Water” — for an audience of thousands from a hilltop on the festival grounds in Indio, Calif. While he rapped briefly on a couple of songs, West was generally the ringleader of the service, as he has been on previous incarnations in California and Oregon since he began leading the service early in January.

To reach the site, Coachella attendees walked some distance from the festival’s parking section to a cordoned-off area of the campground. A full band — complete with harp — was set up on the plateaued top of a circular mound covered with freshly laid sod. A waist-high fence surrounded the hill, which had a sort of VIP area extending up another grassy hill behind the stage. Across the field, patrons could purchase food and beverages including orange juice, coffee and smoothies, plus chicken and waffles, breakfast tacos and burritos. Yet many more were interested in the “church clothes,” — a.k.a. merch — for sale, including sweatshirts for $165-$225, “Jesus Walks” socks for $50, $70 T-shirts reading “Trust God” on the front and “Sunday Service at the Mountain” on the back.

The service opened with a slightly eerie organ prelude, as West and the dozens-strong choir, glad in purple-beige robes, made their way toward the hill. Gradually they arrayed in a circle around it while more robe-clad singers and dancers arrayed atop the hill behind the stage.

After around 15 minutes of prelude, percussion kicked in and the band began playing jazz-fusion-flavored music reminiscent of Stevie Wonder’s and Roy Ayers’ early ‘70s albums. It was a large band, with at least five percussionists, a big horn section, a harpist as well as the dozens-strong choir, all of whom were wearing headset microphones.

After about 20 minutes the musicians stopped playing, except for a single guitarist keeping rhythm, as West took the stage alongside the percussionists, fist-bumping bandmembers along the way.

The music resumed, switching between the full band and organ prelude music, with a pair of vocalists scat-singing while more choir members filed onto the hill, occasionally saying “He is risen!”

The livestream occasionally pulled back to an aerial shot that showed how the performance area, with the cleared grass around it, resembled an eye. (Many commentators on social media also pointed out the setup’s similarity to the fictional world of the surreal 1990s children’s TV show “TeleTubbies”.)

After about 45 minutes the singing began in earnest, with the choirleader exhorting the singers as well as the crowd: “Come on, turn up a little volume on that praise! Can we hear that name one more time? He is Jesus!”

After a gospel vamp around the phrase “You’re the only power!,” the singer suddenly broke into the chant from West’s 2010 hit “Power,” clapping out the rhythm. That quickly morphed into “Higher,” and another that seemed to be a rearrangement of Otis Redding’ “Try a Little Tenderness” with a chorus of “Jesus won’t leave us,” then Stevie Wonder’s “As” and then a stirring take on Soul II Soul’s 1990 hit “Back to Life,” the chorus of which sounded stunning sung a capella by a gospel choir.

The music gradually segued into Teyana Taylor singing her West-produced “Never Would Have Made It,” which morphed into a take on West’s “Fade,” which itself interpolates Motown artists Rare Earth’s cover of the Temptations’ “(I Know) I’m Losing You.”

INDIO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 20: Kanye West performs during 2019 Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival on April 20, 2019 in Indio, California. (Photo by Timothy Norris/Getty Images for Coachella)

INDIO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 20: Kanye West performs during 2019 Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival on April 20, 2019 in Indio, California. (Photo by Timothy Norris/Getty Images for Coachella)

The choirmaster continued to lead the choir through vamps on phrases like “We absorb the light” and “We have everything we need.” Dozens more dancers were arrayed around the hills surrounding the performance area, breaking out synchronized dance moves.

Through the performance, West — with his short-cropped hair dyed several shades of purple— was beaming and joining in, but not really performing until toward the end, when he sat down at a keyboard and chopped up some soulful vocal samples with beats while a choir member danced.

“Ye, we all want some of that brighter day!” the choirmaster shouted as the choir broke into Kirk Franklin’s song of the same name.

The group continued vamping on various phrases and snippets of songs — we even think we heard someone briefly say “Poopity scoop,” a reference to West’s jokey song “Lift Yourself” — until finally West picked up a mic and, with his voice hoarse, rapped on “All Falls Down,” with the choir joining him on the chorus.

He then announced a new song called “Water,” a low-key song with spiritually themed lyrics and a gentle rhythm revolving around the chorus “We are water,” closing with some verses from “Ultralight Beam.” After more extended vamping, the set ended with a long take on West’s 2004 song “Jesus Walks”; West picked up the mic and hoarsely rapped the song’s verses, finishing on his knees on the hilltop as cameras and applauding singers surrounded him.

Finally, he rose and smiled at the camera, pausing for several long moments before the band played a medley of gospel and soul covers and the dancers filed off of the hill.

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https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/coachella-kanye-west-sunday-service-easter

2019-04-21 20:19:04Z
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‘La Llorona’ Conjures $30M Overseas Bow; ‘Shazam!’ & ‘Dumbo’ cross $300M WW – International Box Office - Deadline

UPDATE, writethru: Warner Bros/New Line’s James Wan-produced horror pic The Curse Of La Llorona haunted cinemas in 71 overseas markets this frame, opening to $30M at the international box office. Along with domestic, the global bow is $56.5M.

In many countries, the Easter weekend is bracketed by days off on the Friday and/or Monday, and Llorona, with its Catholic iconography, tapped into that. Latin America leans into horror and this film, with Mexican folklore at its center, was No. 1 in the region where it is tracking above The Conjuring (+11%), Halloween (+30%), A Quiet Place (+60%) and Lights Out (+95%). Mexico leads all play at $5.3M while Europe and parts of Asia had decent starts; Brazil was slightly soft with the market dominated by family fare (Shazam!, Dumbo) and the faith-based Breakthrough.

The thriftily-priced $9M La Llorona still has Japan and the UK to come. Too bad it didn’t release in the latter this weekend which could have used the jolt. Right now, it looks like the current session in Britain could be the first four-day Easter weekend this century to gross under £10M. There’s been lovely weather there, but the lack of a major opener also is showing impact.

Of course, next weekend will be a different story amid the thunderous arrival of Avengers: Endgame. Cinemas in London, Leicester, the Midlands, Bristol and many more are already selling out shows. Highlighting the anticipation for Endgame, even China was quiet this frame, led by the continuing play of P Storm ($113M cume), and as pre-sales on the MCU pic have surged past $60M.

Widely for non horror fans, this weekend was all about holdovers. Notably, WB/New Line/DC’s Shazam! added another $22M to cross the $200M mark overseas and $300M globally. Families also leant an ear to Disney’s Dumbo, pushing the expensive little pachyderm above both those same milestones.

Ahead of the worldwide reckoning with Thanos that begins Wednesday offshore, Disney/Marvel’s Captain Marvel put a couple new notches on her belt. With a global cume of $1.09B through Sunday, Carol Danvers now fronts the No. 8 all-time superhero movie, passing The Dark Knight Rises.

Elsewhere, Voltage’s teen drama After had another good weekend, grossing $9.5M in 38 markets for a $25.4M overseas cume, per comScore. Lionsgate/Millennium’s Hellboy meanwhile picked up just $3.4M in 40 hubs, also per comScore.

Breakdowns on this week’s films have been updated below.

NEW
THE CURSE OF LA LLORONA

The Michael Chaves-directed horror pic, which is not directly connected to the Conjuring universe as it doesn’t involve paranormal investigators, the Warrens, opened in 71 overseas markets to $30M on 13,262 screens. The top film internationally in a largely holdover weekend ahead of next frame’s Avengers: Endgame was No. 1 in the Latin American region, tapping into the Easter holiday and Mexican folklore. As noted above, it bested a handful of comps in the region.

In Europe, the Middle East and Africa, it’s on par with The Conjuring, A Quiet Place and Lights Out. In Asia, it’s the No. 1 movie, coming in more than double Pet Sematary and Halloween.

The best overall play was Mexico at $5.3M on 2,600 screens with a 32% share of the Top 5 titles. It outperformed nearly all comps there including Insidious: The Last Key (+36%), The Conjuring (+61%), A Quiet Place (+101%), Pet Sematary (+158%) and Lights Out (+185%).
 
Colombia was the next best start at $2.4M and ahead of all comps except Annabelle. France grossed $2.1M on 254 screens to rank No. 2, on par with a number of comps and over Lights Out (+20%) and A Quiet Pladce (%39%).
 
Spain brought in $1.7M on 330 screens, ranking No. 3, but above most comps including 34% over Annabelle. Indonesia scared up $1.6M on 654 screens at No. 1, also topping most comps.

Korea ($1.3M/620 screens/No. 2), India ($1.1M/1,032/No. 1 U.S. movie), Russia ($1.1M/1,758/No. 3), Italy ($863K/314 screens/No. 3) and Brazil ($796K/350/No. 4) round out the Top 10.

The UK and Japan are still to come along with a handful of markets as the movie looks to act as counterprogramming to Thanos and crew.

HOLDOVERS/EXPANSIONS
SHAZAM!

Warner’s family friendly superhero added another $22M with school breaks and the Easter holiday helping fuel the box office. Playing on about 16,000 screens in 80 markets, the Zachary Levi-starrer has now grossed $201.5M abroad and $322.8M globally.

Japan opened this session with $2M on 723 screens at No. 4, but No. 1 for a U.S. movie. The release topped Ant-Man by 9% and is on par with Guardians Of The Galaxy.

Brazil in the 3rd frame dropped just 21% to stay No. 1 and gross $11.4M to date. Australia held the No. 1 spot while Mexico dipped to No. 3. The UK took back the No. 1 slot on a very quiet weekend and Spain increased 2% in the 3rd session. Colombia also saw a sizable increase, up 34%.

The Top 10 markets are China ($43.5M), the UK ($15.4M), Mexico ($14.2M), Brazil ($11.4M) and Australia ($9.8M).

DUMBO

Also in the family sphere, Disney’s Dumbo added $13.7M from 55 material markets. The offshore cume is now $206.6M for $307.9M worldwide. Belgium is a big fan of the pachyderm, maintaining No. 1 for the fourth straight weekend. Within the rest of Europe, holds were good for the holiday including in Denmark (-5%), Spain (-12%), Portugal (-24%) and France (-46%).

In Lat Am, Dumbo dropped just 12% with strong holds in Colombia (+28%), Argentina (+20%), Peru (+5%), Chile (-3%), Brazil (-19%) and Mexico (-35%).

Across Asia-Pacific, strong holds include New Zealand (+30%), Singapore (+19%), Hong Kong (-4%) and Australia (-9%).

The Top 5 markets are the UK ($27.9M), China ($21.8M), Mexico ($20.2M), Spain ($14M) and France ($12.2M).

WONDER PARK

Paramount’s animated amusement admitted another $10.9M worth of visitors in 56 markets. That includes a debut in China where the start was No. 3 with $3M at 8,992 locations. The international cume is now $48.5M.

Also new this session were the Netherlands ($328K/135 sites) and Hong Kong ($264K/40).

France led the weekend play and has now grossed $6.1M. Korea is the final market to release, way down the line in August.

CAPTAIN MARVEL

In the 7th weekend, Disney/Marvel’s Captain Marvel picked up $6.5M from 49 material markets. The offshore total is now $689.5M with $1,089.5M worldwide where Carol Danvers is the No. 8 biggest superhero of all time.

Europe dropped 37% regionally with a great +25% hold in Spain and slight eases elsewhere. Korea also got a bump, up 70% as anticipation for Endgame swells. Latin America had a 12% drop, increasing in Chile by 2% and dipping just 14% in Brazil.

Here are the Top 5 grossers: China ($153.6M), the UK ($49.7M), Korea ($45.1M), Brazil ($37.9M) and Mexico ($33.2M).

MISC UPDATED CUMES/NOTABLE

Pet Sematary (PAR): $5.5M intl weekend (58 markets); $46.1M intl cume
Breakthrough (FOX/DIS): $2.8M intl weekend (20 markets/+28% in Brazil); $5.9M cume
Us (UNI): $1.7M intl weekend (58 markets); $75.3M intl cume
Little (UNI): $1.4M intl weekend (13 markets); $4.8M intl cume
How To Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (UNI): $700K intl weekend (37 markets); $355.4M intl cume
Bohemian Rhapsody (FOX): $500K intl weekend (20 markets); $685.6M intl cume
Greta (UNI): $500K intl weekend (2 markets); $3M intl cume ($1.5M Universal)
Boy Erased (UNI): $200K intl weekend (8 markets); $4.6M intl cume

LOCAL-LANGUAGE

Foxstar’s Indian pic Kalank, a romance drama set during the 1940s partition and from Karan Johar’s Dharma Productions, opened to $10.4M in two markets offshore. Of that, $9.5M was from India where the movie is No. 1 this weekend. Alia Bhatt, Varun Dhawan and Aditya Roy Kapoor star in the title by director Abhishek Varman.

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https://deadline.com/2019/04/curse-of-la-llorona-shazam-dumbo-captain-marvel-china-global-international-box-office-1202599323/

2019-04-21 19:40:00Z
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