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/ 23 September 2005
JM Coetzee’s <i>Slow Man</i> clearly exhibits a greater degree of moral symmetry than is typically the case with the author, writes Derek Hook.
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/ 23 September 2005
Interior allusions An ethnic sprinkle of babies sit in a cordoned-off clump in the centre of Franchise. They are perfectly behaved kiddies, not a squawk or dribble out of line, but like the sedated inmates of an old-age home they make you feel ill at ease (image right). Theresa-Anne Mackintosh’s cute and quizzical cast of […]
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/ 23 September 2005
Something felt wrong. My car raced through Kabul, a strained city normally clogged with people, choked with dust and filled with a cacophony of honking car horns and calls to prayer. But at lunchtime last Sunday — a working day in Afghanistan — we whizzed through deserted streets, past shuttered shops and ghostly bazaars.
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/ 23 September 2005
Indonesia’s 15-year-old racer Doni Tata Pradita said on Friday his goal was to climb to the number-one ranking in the 125cc class of the World Championships. Doni, who rides the Yamaha TZ 125, is making his first ever appearance in the championship series as a wild card entrant at the Malaysian Motocycle Grand Prix which begins here on Friday.
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/ 23 September 2005
Listing the Airports Company of South Africa (Acsa) instead of ”de-privatising” 20% could have promoted broad-based black economic empowerment (BEE), the Democratic Alliance said on Friday. ”This would have broadened the ownership of one of South Africa’s most successful parastatals,” said the DA.
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/ 23 September 2005
Instead of millions of rands being poured into official musicals about NEPAD that fail to inspire, it is the Jazzarts of our country that should be supported and recognised, writes Mike van Graan.
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/ 23 September 2005
<b>MOVIE OF THE WEEK:</b>The representation of physicality in movies is most pronounced in slapstick comedy and in hand-to-hand combat. In <i>Kung Fu Hustle</i>, they become one, writes Shaun de Waal.
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/ 23 September 2005
Kurdish filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi’s <i>Turtles Can Fly</i> is not ideological, but instead depicts reality through the most innocent of bystanders — children, writes Kaori Kaneko.
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/ 23 September 2005
<b>CD OF THE WEEK:</b> In the arena of experimentation and innovation, Goldfrapp glitter. Composed and arranged with the use of electronic equipment, the resulting sound is both fresh and original — and is equally appealing when played live by a five-piece outfit, writes Kelly Fletcher.
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/ 23 September 2005
Should new music be accessible? For American minimalist composer Philip Glass, the answer is clearly yes, Kirsty Dawes reports.