Fans of British actor Colin Firth will soon see him on the royal throne as the star plays King George VI in his upcoming movie.
The 48-year-old actor will play Queen Elizabeth II’’s father in The King’’s Speech, reports Contactmusic.
The film depicts the efforts of the royal house to correct a stammer in his speech when [...]
Posts Tagged ‘VI’
Colin Firth to play King George VI in new movie
Bean at Goodwood
Here’s something a little bit different. Mr Bean, the TV comedy character played by Rowan Atkinson, is to drive around the Goodwood Motor Circuit in character as Mr Bean each day as part of a huge parade of Minis to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Mini at the Goodwood Revival classic car event later this month. Apparently, it’s the first time ever that Mr Bean has appeared in public (ie Atkinson in character as the blithering but lovable near-mute idiot who unwittingly gets into absurd scrapes).
Mr Bean will be driving his distinctive pea green and black Mini sitting in an armchair attached to the roof of the car, using a mop and string to operate the pedals and steering.
Atkinson will recreate the scene from the Mr Bean television series when the character bought various items in a department store sale, including a large arm chair, and then realised that it would not fit in his diminutive Mini, leading to him strapping the chair to the car roof and driving it home from his lofty perch. Atkinson will also compete in an original 1965 Austin Mini Cooper S in an all-Mini St Mary’s Trophy saloon car race at the Revival, plus demonstrate his Jaguar Mk VI as part of the 80th birthday tribute to Sir Stirling Moss.
Go Bean!
Hague turns down ViÅ¡egrad butcher’s release motion
The Hague Tribunal has turned down convicted war criminal Milan Lukić’s application for temporary release. Lukić, sentenced to life imprisonment in July for crimes committed in Višegrad between 1992 and 1994, applied for temporary release of a maximum of five days to visit his parents in Belgrade.
Microsoft Delivers ASP.NET MVC V2 Preview
Microsoft releases a preview of Version 2 of its ASP.NET MVC Web application development system.
– Microsoft on July 31 released a preview of Version 2 of its ASP.NET
MVC Web application development system.
In a blog post on the release, Scott
Guthrie, corporate vice president of Microsoft .NET Developer Platform,
said the new ASP.NET MVC V2 preview works with .NET 3.5 Service Pack 1 and
Vi…
Vi typhoid vaccine protects young Indian children
A currently available and yet unused typhoid vaccine has been found effective in protecting young children in India, according to researchers.
The research team from National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases (NICED) in Kolkata, India and International Vaccine Institute (IVI), Korea showed that vaccine Vi polysaccharide is ideally suited to use in developing countries [...]
Serbian warlord jailed for life for massacres
Milan Lukic guilty of massacring Muslims in Bosnian war during reign of terror under Radovan Karadzic
One of the most notorious Serbian mass murderers and paramilitary chiefs from the war in Bosnia was sentenced to life in prison today, 17 years after he helped turn the ancient town of Visegrad in eastern Bosnia into a morgue for Muslims.
Milan Lukic, whose career has included organised crime, drug rackets, involvement in the protection networks of Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and years on the run in Latin America, was found guilty of murder and crimes against humanity by the international war crimes tribunal in The Hague.
He was sentenced to life for six separate incidents of war crimes, entailing murder, extermination, cruelty, persecution and inhumane acts. His cousin and co-defendant, Sredoje Lukic, received 30 years.
From the start of the Bosnian war in 1992, Milan Lukic gained a particularly grim reputation as a sadistic warlord in and around the Muslim-majority town of Viˇsegrad on the river Drina near the border with Serbia.
He led the paramilitary band known as the White Eagles, which, under licence from Belgrade and the Serbian security services, unleashed a reign of terror, mass murder and ethnic cleansing
Within months of the war starting, the Muslims of Visegrad were either dead or had fled.
They were packed into houses that were then torched, with Lukic lingering outside to shoot any who tried to escape. The victims included newborn babies. Other victims were lined up on the banks of the Drina river and executed, or they were shot on the famous old Ottoman bridge spanning the Drina at Visegrad and the corpses were dumped in the river.
Women and girls were held in rape camps. Victims complained that Lukic was not charged with rape.
He was sentenced for the murder of more than 120 civilians – women, children and elderly people – in two incidents in which the detainees were jammed into the room of a house which was then set alight.
Presiding judge Patrick Robinson said: “These horrific events stand out for the viciousness of the incendiary attack, for the obvious premeditation and calculation that defined it, for the sheer callousness and brutality of herding, trapping and locking the victims in the two houses, thereby rendering them helpless in the ensuing inferno, and for the degree of pain and suffering inflicted on the victims as they were burnt alive.
“In the all too long, sad and wretched history of man’s inhumanity to man, the Pionirska Street and Bikavac fires must rank high.”
Lukic was also found guilty of executing 12 male civilians in two incidents and of shooting a woman dead at point-blank range. Robinson characterised Lukic’s crimes as displaying a “callous and vicious disregard for human life”.
The trial is likely to be the last at the tribunal dealing with perpetrators directly engaged in murder.
Lukic’s murders of at least 133 civilians all occurred within a three-week-period in June 1992. After the war, Lukic operated with impunity, running organised crime networks and rackets involved with the protection of Karadzic, finally captured in Belgrade last year. Lukic enjoyed the protection of the Serbian police despite being indicted for war crimes 11 years ago.
In 2003, he fled to Latin America and was arrested in Buenos Aires in 2005.
Lukić cousins get life, 30 years in jail
The Hague Tribunal has found guilty and sentenced Milan Lukić to life in prison, while his cousin Sredoje Lukić was handed down 30 years in jail. The Bosnian Serbs were tried for crimes against humanity and war crimes committed against Bosnian Muslims in Višegrad during the 1992-1995 war.
Scott Mendelson: Huff Post Review: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009)
By any normal standard, this is a wonderfully involving and entertaining tent pole popcorn entertainment. But this is still the weakest Harry Potter film of the series.



