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Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts

2022/09/07

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One Piece Film : Red United States Premiere Date

Gorō Taniguchi’s One Piece Film: Red will be making its way to screens in the United States and elsewhere this fall. The animated fantasy flick originally debuted in Japan earlier this month, and is now slated for release in North America, Australia and New Zealand in October. The news was announced in a rather unique format: by the school marching band at a University of Southern California football game as the USC Trojans raced off against Rice University on Saturday. A special video promoting One Piece Film: Red was streamed during halftime and the marching band performed songs from the film’s soundtrack. The script for One Piece Film: Red was written by Kuroiwa Tsuto. Series creator, Eiichiro Oda, serves as an executive producer. Kaori Nazuka voices Uta’s speaking voice and Ado is behind her singing voice. While Toei Company distributed the film in Japan, Crunchyroll will be showing the film in select theaters abroad.


Crunchyroll bills the film as follows:

Uta  the most beloved singer in the world. Renowned for concealing her own identity when performing, her voice has come to be described as “otherworldly.” Now, for the first time ever, Uta will herself to the world at a live concert. As the venue fills with all kinds of Uta fans excited pirates, the Navy watching closely, and the Straw Hats led by Luffy who simply came to enjoy her sonorous performance the voice that the whole world has been waiting for is about to resound. The story begins with the shocking fact that she is Shanks’ daughter.

One Piece Film: Red premieres in the U.S., Australia and New Zealand this October.

2021/01/20

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US art project commemorates Kamala Harris's achievements

How do you celebrate a historical moment such as the inauguration of Kamala Harris? American producer Codie Elaine Oliver has partnered with several renowned artists for When We Gather, a collaborative art initiative that hopes to inspire reflection and celebration on the achievements of the vice president-elect in a time of great divide in the United States.

This multifaceted project is launched by artists María Magdalena Campos-Pons, Okwui Okpokwasili, and LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs to inspire reflection and celebration on this epoch-making day in United States history. It features a three-minute art film in which director Codie Elaine Oliver (Black Love) pays homage to "heroines of the past, visionaries of the present and leaders of the future."


 The aforementioned artists as well as Dell Marie Hamilton, Jana Harper, Lisa E. Harris, and Samita Sinha perform in When We Gather. Academy Award-nominated actress Alfre Woodard narrated the short film, whose soundscape incorporates both lyrics and a poem written by Diggs for the project.

When We Gather also features choreographed movements and gestures from diverse traditions, which evoke storms, spirals and ancestral energy.

"The circle shows us how we can remain connected even while we are separated due to this pandemic or due to the state of the nation. All of these factors have informed the collaborative choreography and spoken word of this global collective experience," says Campos-Pons, who envisioned the project and brought the artists together.

The film will be broadcast on a dedicated website on Jan 27 at 7pm EST, (8am, Jan 28, Malaysian time). It will be followed by When We Gather: Together, a behind-the-scenes interactive programme hosted by Dr Nikki A. Greene. The hour-long event, available online through Feb 15, will feature a conversation about the film, interviews with those involved in it, as well as additional performances that contextualise themes like "heal, unite, create."

"Harris claimed this moment for 'the generations of women - Black women, Asian, White, Latina, and Native American women throughout our nation's history who have paved the way for this moment.' She called on us all: mothers, grandmothers, sisters, aunts, girls; cis and trans, to celebrate with her. When We Gather is our collective answer to her invitation," explain the participating artists.

The magazine cover of contention

While several projects have paid homage to Kamala Harris ahead of her inauguration, Vogue's February cover depicting the vice president-elect has sparked controversy. One of the photographs, shot by Tyler Mitchell, shows Harris wearing Converse sneakers in front of a glossy pink silk drape - a setting deemed too casual for several fashion critics. Robin Givhan, senior critic at the Washington Post, wrote that the image "did not give Kamala Harris due respect. It was overly familiar... Vogue overstepped. It got too chummy too fast."

As the controversy grew, Vogue's editor-in-chief Anna Wintour responded to online accusations in a statement to the New York Times.

"Obviously we have heard and understood the reaction to the print cover and I just want to reiterate that it was absolutely not our intention to, in any way, diminish the importance of the vice-president-elect's incredible victory," she stated.