tv The Papers BBC News May 2, 2021 10:30pm-11:00pm BST
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i hope you had a pleasant sunday. it's been another day of sunny spells and scattered showers. certainly the best of the weather was first thing in the morning. a glorious start for many with not a cloud in the sky. high pressure still dominates the story but the air a lot of that high quite unstable now. that's been triggering off some sharp showers as we've gone through the day. so this is been the story of the last few hours. showers drifting their way from west to east and some of them a real nuisance. that means that the weather watchers that we've been sent in a little earlier this afternoon, we're starting to look like this with some threatening looking cloud. the showers will tend to fade away as we go through the evening. the overnight, we start to see this area of low pressure we've been telling you about moving into northern ireland, gradually bringing wet and windy weather. ahead of it, quite a lot of cloud, so that means temperatures
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holding up above freezing. a frost free start to bank holiday monday. but it will turn increasingly wet and windy is that rain pushes through northern ireland into scotland and northern england. perhaps staying dry to the far north of scotland and in east anglia and the southeast until the end of the day. the winds quite a feature as well. circulating around that low, we will see gusts of winds on exposed coasts, in excess of 60 miles an hour across the far southwest — some rough seas here. and the wind and rain arejust going to make it feel really just disappointingly cool — seven to 12 degrees the high. that low pressure will drift off into the near continent but still we keep plenty of isobars on the chart across the uk. and the wind direction coming from the north. gale force gusts of winds along the north sea driving in some showers, a cool and disappointing feel to the day. those showers turning increasingly wintry to the tops of higher ground in scotland, northern england and north wales. again those temeratures really struggling for the first week of may. the low will move away, we've still got the blue tones and the northerly wind with us. first thing on wednesday morning, the winds will fall light. we could see a touch of frost returning. it will be a largely
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fine, dry start. a few more showers breaking out into the afternoon but fewer on wednesday in comparison to tuesday. but still, the temperatures really struggling. that's going to be the story as we move into thursday. hopefully by friday, the showers will start to ease, it will be a little bit quieter but still on the cool side.
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hello. this is bbc news. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow morning's papers in a moment. first, the headlines... manchester united's premier league match with liverpool has been postponed after fans invaded the pitch at old trafford in protest against the club's american owners. people in england may not need to self—isolate if they've been in close contact with someone with coronavirus, with daily rapid tests offered as an alternative to quarantine. the foreign office plays down any suggestion that british—iranian aid worker nazanin zaghari—ratcliffe is to be freed after iran's state tv claimed the uk had paid to secure it. a national day of mourning in israel after 45 men and boys were killed by a crush at a jewish festival early on friday in the north of the country.
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hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are broadcaster and psychotherapist, lucy beresford, and bloomberg uk politics reporter, joe mayes. hello to you both. tomorrow's front pages... the i leads on manchester united fans breaking into old trafford to protest against the club's american owners. it says the revolt has thrown the game into dissaray. next is the guardian, which also features supporters on the pitch at man united — but its main story is a warning from a senior tory, who says that if the prime minister has been found to have breached the ministerial
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code he should resign. next is the ft, which carries a warning from the world's leading vaccine manufacturer in india, which says a shortage of the jab could last for months. referring to astrazeneca. in the daily mail, and their campaign to have a memorial to the victims of the pandemic constructed in st paul's cathedral. it says readers have donated more than £60,000 to the idea. and the times, which leads on claims the government could be on the verge of scrapping social distancing rules from the 21st of june. so let's begin. joe and lucy, lovely to see you. we will start with the front page of the i, the sporting football news that really dominated this afternoon.— that really dominated this afternoon. , ., , ., , afternoon. yes, images from this articular afternoon. yes, images from this particular match _ afternoon. yes, images from this particular match which _ afternoon. yes, images from this particular match which has - afternoon. yes, images from this particular match which has now. afternoon. yes, images from this i particular match which has now been officially postponed between
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manchester united and liverpool, a really crucial game, as liverpool won their man city would become champions but the match has been delayed because of about 200 protesters who broke into the stadium and as you can see from the incredibly graphic images, notjust on this front page but several others, they threw flares and ripped up others, they threw flares and ripped up flags but very alarmingly, two policemen have been injured and one has been smashed, slashed across the face with a broken bottle. what we have got our fans of liverpool and manchester united but in particular here, man united, still aggrieved that their owners were hoping to take football teams into the super league. and even though that super league. and even though that super league has not withered on the vine, the fans are still protesting at the owners. it is a very difficult
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situation because there are a number of clubs particularly in the premier league who are owned by incredibly affluent people who are not from the uk, they perhaps do not understand how football works in the uk, the sort of grass roots level of the game. and there has been the somatic clash between the fans and the owners, really graphically illustrated by these photos. we 'ust lost ou illustrated by these photos. we 'ust lost you there. fl illustrated by these photos. we 'ust lost you there, but i illustrated by these photos. we 'ust lost you there, but we i illustrated by these photos. we 'ust lost you there, but we will i illustrated by these photos. we 'ust lost you there, but we will stickh lost you there, but we will stick with it. the guardian, carrying on with it. the guardian, carrying on with this story, joe. your thoughts on what took place today? figs with this story, joe. your thoughts on what took place today?- on what took place today? as lucy said, it on what took place today? as lucy said. must— on what took place today? as lucy said, itjust shows _ on what took place today? as lucy said, itjust shows the _ on what took place today? as lucy said, itjust shows the strength - on what took place today? as lucy said, itjust shows the strength of| said, itjust shows the strength of feeling _ said, itjust shows the strength of feeling there is amongst fans against — feeling there is amongst fans against their owners these days, clearly _ against their owners these days, clearly the super league was a catalyst — clearly the super league was a catalyst of this protest today but the ill— catalyst of this protest today but the ill feeling against the glazer family— the ill feeling against the glazer family amongst supporters has been --oin family amongst supporters has been going on_ family amongst supporters has been going on for years, since the takeover— going on for years, since the takeover in 2005 and there is a
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feeling — takeover in 2005 and there is a feeling that there is a massive disconnect between them and the club and they— disconnect between them and the club and they don't understand the culture — and they don't understand the culture or— and they don't understand the culture or have the best interests of the _ culture or have the best interests of the club — culture or have the best interests of the club in mind. it must be cautioned _ of the club in mind. it must be cautioned that this was a fairly, very— cautioned that this was a fairly, very vocai— cautioned that this was a fairly, very vocal minority of fans, some manchester united supporters groups have condoned the tactics used today — have condoned the tactics used today. but it does show the strength of feeling _ today. but it does show the strength of feeling against the owners and where _ of feeling against the owners and where do — of feeling against the owners and where do we go from here? we could see more _ where do we go from here? we could see more protest like this change does _ see more protest like this change does not — see more protest like this change does not happen and if we don't see more _ does not happen and if we don't see more fan _ does not happen and if we don't see more fan controller clubs, i for think— more fan controller clubs, i for think we — more fan controller clubs, i for think we might see this in future. otherwise — think we might see this in future. otherwise this ill feeling will continue. staying with the guardian and the lead story for the paper, senior tory says and the lead story for the paper, senior tory sastohnson should quit if he broke donation rules. lucy? douglas ross, the leader of the scottish conservatives, was interviewed today and like most conservative politicians, even if they've gone on to the media to talk about one topic, they are being asked about the infamous
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refurbishment of the flat that boris johnson lives in with his partner, carrie symonds, and their son. bublik to the surprise of number 10, douglas ross said yes, i think that if rules have been broken then it would only be right that boris johnson should resign. borisjohnson and number 10 have sought to keep a lid on this over the last week and we have crucial elections coming up on thursday and the big debate is firstly whether the story cuts through, but even if it does not, for the electorate, have routes been broken? there are several enquiries being set up in order to find out who paid which invoice and when. but itjust so happens that douglas ross, who you would assume would be batting for the same team, appears to be breaking ranks. the question,
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i su ose, to be breaking ranks. the question, i sunpose. is— to be breaking ranks. the question, i suppose, is with _ to be breaking ranks. the question, i suppose, is with thursday - to be breaking ranks. the question, | i suppose, is with thursday looming, downing street might be frustrated, but has a damaged borisjohnson? i was in hartlepool last —— this week ahead _ was in hartlepool last —— this week ahead of— was in hartlepool last —— this week ahead of the by—election in the mood is this— ahead of the by—election in the mood is this does— ahead of the by—election in the mood is this does not matter much to many voters _ is this does not matter much to many voters because what matters to them is are _ voters because what matters to them is are they _ voters because what matters to them is are they delivering a public service, — is are they delivering a public service, givingjobs is are they delivering a public service, giving jobs to my career and so _ service, giving jobs to my career and so on — service, giving jobs to my career and so on. there are bigger things voters _ and so on. there are bigger things voters might seem to care about but given— voters might seem to care about but given the _ voters might seem to care about but given the succession of negative coverage — given the succession of negative coverage we have had you can perhaps be-in coverage we have had you can perhaps begin to _ coverage we have had you can perhaps begin to see _ coverage we have had you can perhaps begin to see the effect and we have seen polling in recent days showing the lead _ seen polling in recent days showing the lead of — seen polling in recent days showing the lead of the conservatives of a labour _ the lead of the conservatives of a labour diminishing slightly so i think— labour diminishing slightly so i think there will be some cause for concern _ think there will be some cause for concern among conservatives, especially if it continues into thursday— especially if it continues into thursday and we have big local elections _ thursday and we have big local elections. it is a worrying dynamic for the _ elections. it is a worrying dynamic for the conservative. of elections. it is a worrying dynamic for the conservative.— for the conservative. of course, three investigations _ for the conservative. of course, three investigations under - for the conservative. of course, three investigations under way. | for the conservative. of course, i three investigations under way. we know what happened in november with sir alex allan when the outcome of
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that inquiry was overruled regarding priti patel? ~ . that inquiry was overruled regarding priti patel? . . . priti patel? indeed. we have a new standard advisor _ priti patel? indeed. we have a new standard advisor being _ priti patel? indeed. we have a new standard advisor being appointed i priti patel? indeed. we have a new. standard advisor being appointed and we're still— standard advisor being appointed and we're still waiting for the register ministerial interest to be published and a _ ministerial interest to be published and a iot— ministerial interest to be published and a lot needs to happen and you would _ and a lot needs to happen and you would think the prime minister, we will find _ would think the prime minister, we will find out if he does the right thing _ will find out if he does the right thing with declaring loans. have other— thing with declaring loans. have other donors as reports were today and we _ other donors as reports were today and we will— other donors as reports were today and we will see that, there's lots for the _ and we will see that, there's lots for the story to run. the and we will see that, there's lots for the story to run.— and we will see that, there's lots for the story to run. the front page ofthe for the story to run. the front page of the financial _ for the story to run. the front page of the financial times, _ for the story to run. the front page of the financial times, really - of the financial times, really concerning because we know this vaccine does not adhere to binaries but one of the world's biggest suppliers of the serum institute in india is issuing a warning. lucy? yes, we have all seen the really dire and shocking footage over the last 10 days of scenes at hospitals in india showing just how massive the second wave is across the
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country. they recorded as a country 400,000 new cases in one day in the last 24 hours but they also have a really big international, global supplier of vaccines. so you might imagine that actually, ok, the indian government were not nimble enough to place orders for vaccines earlier on this year but if you have a manufacturer that is in situ in your country, you could imagine that maybe this could turn around very quickly. but unfortunately, the head of the serum institute in india, the maker of these vaccines, is not only saying that we don't think we will be able to have capacity for several months to come, which is incredibly alarming for the nation, to think they will not be able to combat the second wave with this vaccine cavalry, but more worryingly, there is a lot of criticism of the government and the way it handled the fact that it might have been
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complacent around this second wave are rising and the fact that it insisted on elections in west bengal taking place, which it has not won. presumably a verdict from the voters on the handling of the pandemic. what we are seeing is massive tension between the government and the people who are actually providing the vaccines that could save lives. �* providing the vaccines that could save lives— providing the vaccines that could save lives. . g .. . .. , save lives. and joe, dominic raab was asked — save lives. and joe, dominic raab was asked today _ save lives. and joe, dominic raab was asked today on _ save lives. and joe, dominic raab was asked today on the _ save lives. and joe, dominic raab was asked today on the andrew . save lives. and joe, dominic raab i was asked today on the andrew marr show whether the uk would be sending vaccines to the uk, which would then perhaps compromise our roll—out in the uk? it perhaps compromise our roll-out in the uk? ., , perhaps compromise our roll-out in the uk? .., ., , ., the uk? it has almost become a -aressin the uk? it has almost become a pressing moral _ the uk? it has almost become a pressing moral question. - the uk? it has almost become a pressing moral question. is- the uk? it has almost become a pressing moral question. is it i the uk? it has almost become a i pressing moral question. is it right that younger people in wealthy nations— that younger people in wealthy nations are being vaccinated, at a time _ nations are being vaccinated, at a time when — nations are being vaccinated, at a time when older people in poor nations— time when older people in poor nations are not. so far the uk government line is that we don't have _ government line is that we don't have any— government line is that we don't have any spare, but they are saying is we _ have any spare, but they are saying is we want — have any spare, but they are saying is we want to vaccinate 30 girls in this country— is we want to vaccinate 30 girls in this country before we give vaccines to others _ this country before we give vaccines to others a— this country before we give vaccines to others. a debate could be had
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about— to others. a debate could be had about whether that is morally correct — about whether that is morally correct but that is the government's stance~ _ correct but that is the government's stance~ it _ correct but that is the government's stance. it doesn't seem like there is huge _ stance. it doesn't seem like there is huge pressure on the uk to send more _ is huge pressure on the uk to send more vaccines to india but we have to see _ more vaccines to india but we have to see and — more vaccines to india but we have to see and clearly this government is prioritising its own citizens. we will end is prioritising its own citizens. will end with is prioritising its own citizens. - will end with the times, social distancing to be scrapped, lucy? social distancing to be scrapped, probably byjune the 21st, but inside the paper there is a bit of tension, there are obviously two groups of tory mps, conservative mps, those who want to make sure that we do open up as previously promised byjean the 21st, that makes us have social distancing in place and wearing masks going to things like theatres and indoor venues. but then you have other conservative mps who are saying, actually, maybe we should still be more cautious step that is this much vaunted date of may the 17th when we
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thought we could go on an overseas holiday and the cohort of conservative mps are beginning to say that we should perhaps not open up say that we should perhaps not open up the borders to overseas travel until all —— august. there are mixed messages coming out and it is very frustrating for the nation to think that we think we have a road map and you have been telling us we have a road map and we have a fantastic vaccine policy but we are still maybe going to, averaging the 21st, not be as free as we thought we were going to be. not be as free as we thought we were going to be— going to be. quickly, jo, from the scientific point _ going to be. quickly, jo, from the scientific point of _ going to be. quickly, jo, from the scientific point of view, _ going to be. quickly, jo, from the scientific point of view, professor| scientific point of view, professor peter openshaw also was speaking words of caution?— words of caution? indeed, there is clearl a words of caution? indeed, there is clearly a concern _ words of caution? indeed, there is clearly a concern that _ words of caution? indeed, there is clearly a concern that despite - words of caution? indeed, there is clearly a concern that despite the l clearly a concern that despite the success _ clearly a concern that despite the success of— clearly a concern that despite the success of the vaccination programme that could _ success of the vaccination programme that could still be another wave of the pandemic in terms of many more people _ the pandemic in terms of many more people catching the violent —— virus and perhaps— people catching the violent —— virus and perhaps lower deaths but of hospitals, pressure again, that could _ hospitals, pressure again, that could lead to more deaths in the wants— could lead to more deaths in the wants so— could lead to more deaths in the wants so even with a successful vaccine — wants so even with a successful vaccine there might have to be these
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continuing _ vaccine there might have to be these continuing restrictions that we talk about— continuing restrictions that we talk about in— continuing restrictions that we talk about in the papers, mask wearing, social— about in the papers, mask wearing, social distancing might be scrapped but we _ social distancing might be scrapped but we might still have those requirements. we but we might still have those requirements.— but we might still have those requirements. but we might still have those reauirements. ~ . ., ., requirements. we have run out of time! hopefully _ requirements. we have run out of time! hopefully we _ requirements. we have run out of time! hopefully we will— requirements. we have run out of time! hopefully we will have - requirements. we have run out of| time! hopefully we will have more time! hopefully we will have more time in the second edition at 11:30pm. thank you both very much. we will see you at the top of the hour. coming up next — it's click. welcome to click. now, we all know how easy it is to fake things online these days. not even photos, voices or videos
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are safe, as we well know, right? yes, we've worn fake clothes, we've faked our voices with software. i've even been entirely faked with a virtual me, although i am convinced that she looked ten years older. i whole—heartedly agree. now, later in the program, we're going to see the hollywood version of this when we look behind the scenes at the film tenet. spoiler alert — it wasn't all real. but these days, you don't need a big budget to do this. just think of those zoom backgrounds that we've all been looking at. admittedly the edges of your hair do often give the game away, but these pictures are pretty good — a lot better than we would have imagined they could be five years ago. harp glissando. so, check out the next advancements. this is where zoom can put meeting participants into a meeting room, a real one that's not real, although i think something's gone wrong with the sizing here, don't you? my seat�*s way too low and you're far too small. there's a variety of scenes. do you want to meet me for a coffee?
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oh, lovely! look, here we are in a coffee shop! yeah, look! yeah, i'll have a latte, please. i'd say this is cute, but does it make you feel like we're in the same room, really? no, i still feel like we're on a zoom call. maybe this is one for the audience rather than the participants. but while there is plenty of fakery around, the truth is out there, as a certain fox once said, and there are some people who know where to look. the internet is just such a vast place, and like there's so much out there that's just public, so many ways that information can be manipulated. and even, like, political news can be manipulated in someone's favour, so that's where i think open—source intelligence is useful. 18—year—old computer science student kenyon lee has gone viral on tiktok by using so—called open—source intelligence, collecting and analysing publicly available data. his main trick is to guess people's exact height by finding other objects in the same shot and tracking down their exact dimensions.
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woman: how tall is spencer? now, kenyon did do this test on a video of me that he found online, and we'll come back to that later, mainly on account of it being the most embarrassing video i've ever posted online. but we have some serious stuff to talk about first. look, trust me on this. see, there are groups of people out there who are using open—source intelligence techniques to do much more serious detective work. these are anatoliy chepiga and alexander mishkin, widely believed to have been responsible for the salisbury poisonings in 2018. this week, a collective of open—source intelligence investigators revealed that they'd also managed to link to these two men to the bombing of a czech ammunition depot four years previously. that collective is bellingcat, and we've met its founder, eliot higgins, before. in 2014, it was just him, but now he has a foundation in the netherlands, 20 staff
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members and a growing network of volunteers all across the world. i caught up with eliot again recently, and he told me that flight logs of chepiga and mishkin's trip to the uk in 2018 were revealed by a russian news site and that showed that their passport numbers were only a few digits apart, which was, to say the least, unusual. that caught the interest of bellingcat, in particular our investigator christo grozev. so, christo looked in these databases and discovered these two individuals didn't exist before 2012. theyjust popped into existence in these databases in 2013, which was suspicious. he then approached basically an information broker who sold him these domestic passport registration documents, and stamped on them was the number of the russian ministry of defence. and it became very clear that these were not ordinary people, that these appeared to be russian intelligence officers. bellingcat�*s investigation
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didn't end there. their evidence showed that scientists linked to the 2018 poisonings were following russian opposition leader navalny on 40 separate trips in 2020, and that includes the journey where he was poisoned. it seems what we've stumbled on, starting with the skripals story, is this entire kind of network of russian assassinations using nerve agents. and that sounds completely insane, but, you know, we have the receipts, we have the phone records, we have everything that shows this is actually happening, and this is basically unique to russia because russia has this kind of massive amount of corruption where data, phone records, even of their spies, are freely available to anyone who does a bit of googling. what tools and software do you and your investigators use when you're looking at photos and you're trying to work out where they've been taken and when you're tracking bits of information back across the internet? we have an online tool box, which is basicallyjust loads of links, by category,
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that anyone can go and look at and use themselves. probably one of the most powerful tools has been google. things like google earth and google streetview, extremely useful in open—source investigation for figuring out where stuff is filmed and photographed. there's resources now that allow you to track aircraft, like flightradar. you have marinetraffic that allows you to track vessels. absolutely fascinating stuff. that was elliot higgins. right, i can't put this off any longer. it's time to go back to kenyon lee. you remember kenyon lee, yeah? the tiktoker who guessed your height from an online video. yeah, so the problem is the video that he chose was my ice bucket challenge video from years ago, which, if you haven't seen, well, you're probably one of the lucky ones. i've seen it...and i can't unsee it. # ijust can't get enough of you...# um, i was trying to raise money for a good cause,
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in memory of some good people, and so i decided to go full outrageous and i kind of forgot that the internet never forgets. this you? ok, here comes kenyon's video. well, i guess this pic's not that much better. i decided to find spencer's height using this panel from his ice bucket challenge. i overlapped these two frames in photoshop and marked the top of his head and scaled his height using the pixels of the bucket. first, we're going to divide the height of the bucket by 134 and multiply that number by 838 to be left with 68.79 inches, or about 5'8" and 4/5 inches which translates to about 174.75cms. anyway, there was a point to all of this! did he get your height right? well, yes, good point, let's find out. what did he say? he said 174.75. let's have a look. oh, wow, 175! not bad, not bad at all. not bad considering he did that from the dimensions of a bucket! yeah, good job he didn't use a 3.5—inch floppy disk. now, one of the few films that i got to see the cinema
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last year was tenet, which, as a massive geek, i absolutely loved. and i know you saw it twice, which i don't think i've ever done. yeah, second time with subtitles, which i really recommend because it helps you to understand what on earth is going on, because this is a film half the story is going forwards and half the story is going backwards at the same time in the same scene! so, maybe it's no surprise that it won the oscar for best visual effects. yeah, and if you did see it and you wondered how they got cars crashing and building exploding in both directions at same time, well, the answer may surprise you. inversion. aim it and pull the trigger. you're not shooting the bullet. you're catching it. doing visual effects on a chris nolan film i imagine is different from the majority of big budget hollywood films with a lot
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of visual effects in. because his approach is very much about finding ways to film practical elements. wherever possible, we wanted to find ways of filming real components and mixing it up a little bit so that they felt very real and grounded in the real world, but still had that sort of slightly odd kind of... it wasn't just a case of filming forwards things and reversing them. there was more to it than that, more interesting and more complicated. a really good example is where we have cars pulling away quickly and they're an inverted car, you would expect the wheels to spin and throw some dust or gravel out backwards. what we did for those, we found a way of dragging a car backwards while its wheels were spinning forwards, so it threw dirt out backwards, but it was going the wrong direction, so then we inverted the thing, so the car pulled away, sucking dust into the back of the wheels. so, that was a really good example of the sort of approach where we find a practical real—world
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event and then just sort of turn it on its head a little bit so that it felt real but wrong. the end scene in the film obviously contains a lot of big explosion events, and there's combination of forwards and backwards explosions at the same time. and obviously you can't train an explosion to be backwards, so we had to add one half of that shot. so whenever there's the combination of two things, one of them has been added. so, we certainly did that a lot for the sequence where there's a minefield, the people in trucks running up and down a hill with mines going off, and we used a combination of practical shot filmed elements, but also cg explosions which had to incidentally match exactly the practical ones cos they were right next to each other. another major event in the end battle scene where a building is simultaneously blown up by an inverted group of people and a normal group of people, so it's simultaneously exploding and imploding.
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so, we built two large, or there were one third scale ten—storey buildings, two matching buildings, and we filmed each of them from a matching camera angle, and we blew one up at the top and one at the bottom. and then we could reverse the film and composite the two together, reverse one of the films and composite the two together, so this building had this sort of simultaneous exploding and imploding event. this reversing the flow of time, doesn't us being here now- mean it never happened? talks backwards. ok, i think spencer's got a bit carried away. as ever, you can find us in the right order on social media — youtube, instagram, facebook and twitter, @bbcclick. talks backwards.
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i'll tell you what, i'll leave him to it. thanks for watching, and we'll see you soon! talks backwards. good morning. what a difference a day makes. that may well be the phrase that springs to mind when you wake up this bank holiday monday because it's turning increasingly wet and windy, with this area of low pressure pushing from the atlantic. so the rain will be there first thing across northern ireland, into western fringes of scotland, wales and england, gradually pushing across the pennines, reaching east anglia and the southeast by the end of the afternoon. there may welljust be a few scattered showers in the northern isles and the far north of scotland,
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but windy for all. gusts of wind widely in excess of 40 mph, maybe 60mph plus in the southwest. and that's just going to make it feel disappointingly cool for the time of year, 6 to 12 degrees the high. it stays cold, windy and showery for the next couple of days, i'm afraid, so the weather story certainly has changed. to summarise our week ahead, bank holiday monday is going to be wet and windy. once that eases away, a combination of sunshine and blustery showers and cold for all.
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this is bbc news with the latest headlines for viewers in the uk and around the world. britain's foreign secretary says iran's continued detention of nazanin zaghari—ratcliffe, amounts to torture: i think she's being treated in the most abusive, torturous way. i think it amounts to torture the way she is being treated. there are also reports in iran of deals to exchange prisoners with the us — something washington says is not happening. we'll ask what this could mean for the foreign nationals detained by tehran. also ahead. another day of record coronavirus deaths in india — as the government considers taking tougher steps to tackle the pandemic. a day of national
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