
-
FIFA boss condemns racial abuse in German Cup games
-
Stocks diverge ahead of Trump-Zelensky talks
-
Spain and Portugal battle wildfires as death toll mounts
-
Joao Felix says late Jota 'will forever be part of football history'
-
Javelin star Kitaguchi finds new home in small Czech town
-
Rain halts rescue operation after Pakistan floods kill hundreds
-
Zelensky says Russia must end war, after Trump pressures Ukraine
-
China slams Germany for 'hyping' regional tensions in Asia
-
US envoy says Israel's turn to 'comply' as Lebanon moves to disarm Hezbollah
-
Asia stocks up before Trump-Zelensky talks
-
Fight to save last forests of the Comoros unites farmers, NGOs
-
Hong Kong court hears closing arguments in tycoon Jimmy Lai's trial
-
Five killed in Russian drone attack on Ukraine apartment block
-
Myanmar junta sets December 28 poll date despite raging civil war
-
German minister says China 'increasingly aggressive'
-
Singapore key exports slip in July as US shipments tumble 42.7 pct
-
German great Mueller has goal ruled out on MLS debut for Vancouver
-
Zelensky, European leaders head to US for talks on peace deal terms
-
Tourism deal puts one of Egypt's last wild shores at risk
-
Two right-wing candidates headed to Bolivia presidential run-off
-
Australian court fines Qantas US$59 million for illegal layoffs
-
Games industry in search of new winning combo at Gamescom 2025
-
Rooms of their own: women-only communities thrive in China
-
Social media hit Ilona Maher takes women's rugby onto new plane
-
Asia stocks up, oil down before Trump-Zelensky talks
-
Zelensky returns to site of stunning Oval Office shouting match
-
Two right-wing candidates headed to Bolivia presidential run-off: projection
-
How to develop perfect battery systems for complex mobile solutions
-
'Skibidi' and 'tradwife': social media words added to Cambridge dictionary
-
Akie Iwai joins twin sister Chisato as LPGA winner with Portland Classic triumph
-
LIV's DeChambeau joins Henley and English as US Ryder Cup qualifiers
-
No.1 Scheffler outlasts MacIntyre to win BMW Championship
-
Swiatek swamps Rybakina, to face Paolini in Cincinnati final
-
Atletico beaten by Espanyol in La Liga opener
-
PSG get Ligue 1 title defence off to winning start
-
Rahm edges Niemann for LIV season title as Munoz wins at Indy
-
Seven killed in latest Ecuador pool hall shooting
-
Mass rally in Tel Aviv calls for end to Gaza war, hostage deal
-
Terence Stamp: from arthouse icon to blockbuster villain
-
World No. 3 Swiatek powers past Rybakina into Cincinnati WTA final
-
Tens of thousands of Israelis protest for end to Gaza war
-
Terence Stamp, 60s icon and Superman villain, dies
-
Air Canada suspends plan to resume flights as union vows to continue strike
-
Arsenal battle to beat Man Utd, world champions Chelsea held by Palace
-
Arsenal capitalise on Bayindir error to beat Man Utd
-
'Weapons' tops North American box office for 2nd week
-
Newcastle sign Ramsey from Aston Villa
-
Terence Stamp in five films
-
Terence Stamp, Superman villain and 'swinging sixties' icon, dies aged 87: UK media
-
Chelsea draw blank in Palace stalemate

Eisenberg, Brody bring men in crisis to Berlin film fest
Hollywood actors Jesse Eisenberg and Adrien Brody star as American men caught up in a global crisis of masculinity in "Manodrome", premiering Saturday at the Berlin film festival.
The thriller by South African director John Trengrove is one of the most keenly awaited of the 19 features vying for the event's Golden Bear top prize, to be awarded February 25 by jury president Kristen Stewart.
"Manodrome" features Brody as "Dad Dan", a cult leader who persuades desperate men, often losers of US capitalism, to cut the ties with the women in their lives.
Eisenberg, who became famous playing Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg in "The Social Network", is nearly unrecognisable as pumped-up hobby bodybuilder Ralphie.
When he loses his factory job and runs into trouble supporting himself and his pregnant girlfriend, Ralphie succumbs to Dan's pitch to join the "Manodrome" -- an all-male space at his home.
Trengrove, who made a splash in 2017 with the male initiation movie "The Ritual" and describes himself as queer, said such men's groups were running rampant around a world he said was "underfathered".
"I think a big crisis that we face now is men... don't learn or acquire basic life skills, how to deal with feelings and emotions," he told reporters.
"You have grown men in the world who have the internal resources of little boys, and then have to hide that and overcompensate with hyperaggression."
- 'Dangerous ideas' -
Dan fatefully offers Ralphie a handgun to make him feel less vulnerable, which Eisenberg said was a typical response to feelings of insecurity in America, where mass shootings are incessantly carried out by isolated men.
"As an American reading a script about this kind of spiralling based on dangerous ideas about masculinity, it seemed like a very logical progression into gun violence," he said.
"But I suppose because this is an international audience" at the festival, he said, "it will play as something particularly American."
Brody, who won an Oscar for his role in Roman Polanski's Holocaust drama "The Pianist", said that men were often sold, both online and in the real world, a distorting and destructive image of how they should be.
"Beyond grappling with masculinity or very blatant issues within society as a whole, (the film) is really about the disconnect with what we intrinsically know as the truth and what we are bombarded with, which becomes the truth," he said.
"All of our collective doubts and past traumas and unresolved issues" create "these fractured lives throughout the world –-the repercussions are endless", he added.
Trengrove said he wanted to explore the "shame and impotence" of men struggling in the US economy.
"I'm generally just interested in the class struggle and how people are products of their socioeconomic background," he said.
"It sometimes feels to me that American films can kind of resist talking about those things."
The Berlin film festival runs until February 26.
L.AbuAli--SF-PST