tv Close up Deutsche Welle September 10, 2019 2:30pm-3:01pm CEST
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android have made it difficult for rivals to compete and harms consumers the investigating states are led by texas there are $48.00 of them plus the district of columbia and puerto rico. the european union has been investigating google for some time brussels a subtle google with nearly 10000000000 dollars not to trust fines over the past 2 years the commission has decided to find google 4340000000 euros for breaching e.u. actually trust rules. google has engaged in illegal practices just immense it's known that market position incidents search. in the us google and the other tech giants have been able to operate relatively undisturbed but things now look as if they're about to get a lot tougher. and that's it for me and the business team here in berlin you can find out more about these and other business stories online at the dot com slash business on social media and stephen beardsley let's watch.
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to the toronto film festival in just a minute but also coming up. in our series 100 german must reads a book cold in times of fading light an intricate saga about family life in the former east germany. and we'll have a look at the beethoven fest in the great composers hometown of ball which got under way we can. but we begin in canada a toronto international film festival because of the time of year it's held it is rather like venice before it considered a bit of a launch pad for the oscars so apart from all the usual independent films there's a few hollywood blockbusters getting their premieres in toronto as well i'll be talking to scott rocks in just a minute but 1st a bit mole about the tiff. it started quite small but over the years to run 2 has
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become one of the most important film industry hops this year it presents for $333.00 films from $84.00 countries it's not an a festival so there's no international competition but that doesn't mean no major premieres and b. star was. good last year green book was screened it won the toronto audience prize and went on to pick up the best picture oscar. because it takes. this year tom hanks is one of the big names dropping him he stars in a movie about us t.v. legend fred rogers. the toronto international film festival runs until sunday. and joining me now direct from toronto is scott iraq's fresh from seeing the movie jo-jo rabbit now this
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is a black comedy about a young boy in the hitler youth who has an imaginary friend in the fall i had to 1st let's see scott just let's see a quick short clip. joe joe my old friend. what's called it and then they call me a scanned rabbit people used to say a lot of nasty things about me. hi scott now scott that's sounds quite surreal you've seen it all. yeah that's real is actually not a bad word for this this is is a quite unusual film has a weird pitch lied it is a story about a young german boy who idolize the nazis set close to the end of the 2nd world war and then he has this imaginary fred who is a version of adult sort of
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a boyhood childish version of sort of a goofy adult hitler and then the boy himself comes into conflict because he discovers that his mother is actually hiding a jewish girl in their house at the time and so he has to make this issue of whether to turn the girl in and be loyal to his doxie beliefs or or do the right thing a very interesting movie it could have really gone horribly wrong i have to say the premise is so problematic but the director here the new zealand director. he also plays hitler actually in the clip that we just saw he gets the balance just right he's an interesting guy he's both bowery and jewish heritage and he gets the balance between the the humor and the whore exactly right this film remind me a lot of life is beautiful another story that found comedy in the horrors of the
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2nd world war and i think it's really an amazing. feat that what he as a man has managed here and could be maybe the final for the 1st film to actually get even germans to laugh at him ok now another black hole but the old. i believe this is a whodunit with a difference. yeah this is an interest film of it's from ryan johnson whose last movie was the last of the last star wars movie so i wasn't really knowing what to expect from him when he did just a whodunit the film is set up like sort of one of those classic agatha christie adaptations you know star studded whodunit here you've got daniel craig jamie lee curtis michael shannon all these these these amazing actors packed into this room in one of the beds a bed and then a guy with a foreign name in a weird accent comes as a tactic to try and solve this case played by daniel craig but usually whodunits
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for me don't work because they've been done to death you know we see hundreds of versions on film and on t.v. but what ryan johnson does with this is he sort of plays with the genre he has a lot of fun with it and he almost makes it almost a satire but in the end it still works as a proper act christie style whodunit watching this film had the feeling like this is the kind of movie that if agatha christie got stoned and wrote a new mystery this is what might come out as a lot of fun and if you're a fan of the old school i think christie's you have a lot of fun with this scope i'm going to lot of target just tell me there's also a lot of talk about one particular bio page a beautiful day in the neighborhood starring tom hanks what did you make about what . yeah this is quite interesting a female director here there's a lot of female directors in this year this is a biopic but with a difference it's stars the nicest man in hollywood tom hanks playing the nicest man in t.v. fred rogers or mr rogers the late children's t.v. presenter and what's interesting about this it's not really the story of fred
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rogers but it's the story of the life of someone who can influence namely a cynical journalist who tried to find the dark secrets about fred rogers but spoiler alert all he found was more wonderfulness this film is like a big warm hug and maybe just the right thing for these sort of talks at times skull always a mine of information great to chill. scott ross wrote in toronto thank you. now in our continuing series 100 german must read featuring great books from german authors that being translated into english we're looking at a book that sheds some light on how family life was in the former communist east germany in times of fading light all you can rule go off is a view of life on the wrong side of the.
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another family gathering from hell the mom could smash the sun doesn't even show up on the 9 year old birthday boy the grandpa probably knows of the happening. and. everyone in or going to his novel in times of fading light knows the old man's and the mentor but it's probably for the best otherwise he'd realize the country has helped build is about to end this like his life it's october 1909 a few weeks before the east german regime collapses. it was 57 when he made his debut with this novel tells the history of east germany through the eyes of a family his own family. the author's alter ego alexandre hates growing up in the country his grandfather believes. he would never hear the rolling stones live would never see woodstock never even see west berlin with its new demos and
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student riots it's free love because between the small narrow world where he would have to spend his life and the other big wide world where real true life was lived there was a border and it was the one that he likes on their own it's our turn to have to guard. in times of fading light is about the failure of a whole country written without accusations or justifications read it if you want to understand what made people build communist east germany and why their dream was doomed to fail. the western german city of ball was looks big beethoven. where he spent a formative years of his life as a beethoven fast that and a featuring many of his works of course but then self was a great innovator so i'm sure he would have approved of the festival features contemporary music and lots of dance as well but it got underway at the weekend
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with classic. music's in the yeah the beethoven fest and been kicked off with one of its annual favorites and i'm screaming off the opening concert of the markets where i'm on. it features spiritual from symphony number 6 also known as the pastoral symphony conducted by you cup a kind of sadness to you and the food i'm on the answering. list to here sitting out signs experiencing this with other people i really like the conductor it's exciting to watch him but it's the you don't like it when you listen to this it's a force of nature fantastic. one last we heard so at dawn's world congress center playing the pastoral symphony and beatles his hometown is a special experience for the $94.00 musicians and the conductor.
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well it's a unique symphony of course and all symphonies and kind of bet on how this kind of . i did about what nature means to people and i think that's the kind of the most important point of view. every year the festival picks a motto and connection to be a tough life and work this year it's moonlight a romantic theme that's based on the composer's moonlight sonata and fits in well with the 50th anniversary of the moon landing the moon time for the minority simply are chanting makes us want to dream. this the man on the moon monument everything seems possible this feelings of love and longing seems a whole thesis connected to the theme of moonlight the moon changes the contours of the real world. over the next few weeks the beethoven fest will
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stage around 50 performances among this year's highlights as a joint concert over german vocal ensemble and a south african a capella group and there's more with ballet experimental works and works for me it's also taking the stage. as it is here my i want to present something special at the beethoven fest it just goes on it's not just about the old masters like my slow enough this wild why do while we go so we can't just one of the old mobsters we want to show what contemporary musicians do with that extraordinary heritage. album. this is why the opening concert is not just about beatles pieces from their trying to get century i included like beloved talks the miraculous mandarin. talk beethoven was a main source of inspiration. because there are so kind of obvious reasons to
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to play better from here but i think it's a very good idea to try to juxtapose the battlefronts. heritage. how it kind of reflects and music after better from. this was the opening concert of this year's beatles. next year it's the 250th anniversary of the composer's birthday john will celebrate the special occasion with not one but 2 festivals. and the 1st one gets underway next march 20th also runs this welcome all of beethoven's 9th symphony march fall on the website as the w. media for the festival so for this edition of arts and culture i. kick
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how the world is pulled over. straining ranches mistreat that. use brutal methods to maximize the love that. consumers never see or hear about profits come rolling. back it'll cost to. play a few minutes w. o. o. d 2 you know that 77 percent. are younger than 6 of fox. cuts me and me and you. and you know what it's time no voice is part. of the 77 in the sense to talk about the issues. this is where you cut.
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their defeat denying him snap elections before being sent home and they've gregg's a deadlock the prime minister suspends parliament for 5 weeks and. gannett insists the u.k. will lead the e.u. on a tuber 31st with or without a deal but one voice will soon be missing from the chamber. to secure a french sparrow's 3 day rule still. the speaker of the house of commons john bercow announcing his resignation last night we'll look back on the man who tried to keep order in the drop this parliament. also coming up with german jihadi bryant now trapped in a kurdish refugee camp our nation's obliged to take back the adults who have joined a foreign terrorist organization will explore the issue. and in soccer germany get the results that they were looking for the men's team edged out northern ireland to go top of their group and euro qualifiers hard fought to deal with puts them back
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on track after friday's defeat by the dutch. i'm sorry kelly welcome to the program the british parliament has again the voted against holding a snap general election prime minister boris johnson had requested one for october 15th but the opposition labor party refused to back the proposal unless johnson agreed to seek a delay to the u.k.'s exit from the european union now amid this crisis johnson has ordered parliament into recess the chamber will only reconvene about 2 weeks before the october 31st brags that deadline. horses snap election bid last week boris johnson gave it another go in a sitting stretching into the early hours of tuesday. once again he was not
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prepared to compromise on his vision of a swift breaks it. and this is big i will go to brussels our government will go to brussels on october the 17th and negotiate our departure on the 31st of october hopefully with a deal mr speaker but without one if necessary i will not ask for another delay oh pre-strike this drew a predictable response from the opposition which wants to avoid a no deal break city 6 un international we really go for it election but as keen as we are we are not prepared to risk inflicting that he's asked out of you know do you want us our community our job our services or indeed our rights. in the end prime minister johnson's election bid was easily defeated the eyes of the rights 293 the nose of the left 46 is going
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to use were quick to pounce. thank you mr speaker i sit ups congratulate the prime minister because at least he's been consistent is lost every vote he's brought to this i think. parliament has now gone into recess for 5 weeks after johnson probed the house the opposition made their opinion clear about the 1st term. i think let's get the view from london now we're joined by correspondent massive beer get we have parliament suspended now until mid october just over 2 weeks before the october 31st breaks that deadline what is going to happen backstage now during this time. well after you seen these really extraordinary scenes on stage sarah last night really really highly unusual m.p.'s are normally very well behaved during these
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ancient rituals when somebody from the house of lords comes to see something like this and the british parliament is really something that has never happened i don't think before for now the m.p.'s are going to go on retreat they're going to go into the party conference season and this gives them the opportunity also to regroup there's a lot going on behind the scenes because it's the expectation that sooner or later we will see a general election here in the u.k. and that begs the question are there maybe going to be something like electoral pacts all the remain parties helping each other all the breaks apart is helping each other talk between the bricks of party and also the conservative party whether they might somehow help each other because they want to see bret's it through at any cost whether the remain parties want to see don't want to leave without any deal so this is also something that's really new in the u.k. that doesn't normally happen nominee it's really one party one vote and they really
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everybody runs for themselves but now the whole while the whole field has been shaken up really unprecedented indeed very good and we also have this law preventing britain leaving the e.u. without a deal signed yesterday by the queen just walk us through what exactly this means i mean does it mean that the u.k. must leave the e.u. with a deal. well the deadline is at the 31st of october and this is when parliament has decided that they call the u.k. call and leave without it's ian at this point now we also know that prime minister boris johnson has said he'd rather die in a ditch than go to the e.u. and ask for an extension and constantly he's using very militaristic language but we've seen this really a tug of war between the government and parliament majority of parliamentarians who are forcing in effect the government to ask for an extension to not leave without
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a deal at this point now exactly how prime minister johnson is going to recall out of his we don't know there is of course a summit coming up and of october that would be his most sensible to try and go to brussels get somehow something that is maybe no it's not so far off from the dealer to resume a has negotiated but something that he can present as a new deal and then a last attempt to get that slightly changed through parliament that would be maybe the most sensible solution and we will see if that's really happening we've seen the cabinet resignation over the weekend one of. our colleagues resigned because she thought he isn't really trying to get that deal so many people doubt whether this is his strategy but that's for sure one of his strategies they're going to mass with a view from london thank you very good meanwhile in a day of high drama in the british parliament the speaker john bercow announced on
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monday that he would be stepping down within weeks his performances and the housekeeping lawmakers in check became history. ira was he had to manage these people i used one with. like a weapon i want to try to be rude for members of. the state sometimes he gave ministers a proper dressing down very distinctly very very rare and spare us to trace ok you know so i'm. sorry i want to odessa my own sweat house it all looks like good fun but announcing his departure explained how seriously he took the job he was leaving his words. throughout my time there was. i have sought
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to increase the relative all over a city of this so the legislature. for which i will make out soon moved the neighborhood of color je ne while thank you. at any time. down missed him thank you for. what. and no doubt hill missed them. let's get a quick check now some other stories making news around the world north korea has fired at least 2 identify projectiles into the sea that's according to south korea's military tuesday's launch was the 8th since late july and came just hours after north korea offered to resume nuclear diplomacy talks with the united states . all crew members have been rescued from a capsized south korean cargo ship off the u.s.
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state of georgia rescuers had to drill through the hole to reach the 24 people who were on board when the golden break capsized on sunday. and hundreds of residents have fled their homes in eastern australia as bush fires raged across thousands of hectares of land emergency crews are battling more than 160 fires in 2 states strong winds low humidity and drought have fueled the blazes and it's monday officials are investigating the possibility of arson. prosecutors across the united states have launched a wide ranging antitrust investigation into google the aim is to determine whether the tech giant's control of online ads and search traffic is resulting in anticompetitive behavior it's thought that other issues such as data privacy may also come under scrutiny. hong kong democracy activist joshua long is taking his message to the road his 1st stop her len the 22 year old at the german parliament after being detained for 24 hours by authorities at hong kong airport
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wang met with germany's foreign minister heiko last and said that the protest movement would continue even after the hong kong government dropped a controversial extradition bill now one says that he will travel to washington next to speak with u.s. lawmakers here's more of what he had to say in berlin. let me be clear we're not a steady stream of free world as it should all try to do we are in a new cold war oh is that you heard it. is no better battlefield for sure very different posing a lot of. real democracy that he wants the 1st to. really go on for the rights. of the world to realize that because he was he was a c. and joshua long will be joining us here on news at $1300.00 central european time
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that's in under 4 hours time and then right afterwards on news asia you're watching news still to come on the program a new poll showing joe biden holding onto his lead among u.s. democrats looking to unseat president donald trump. joins biden on the campaign trail. but 1st a court here in germany recently ruled that the federal government must repatriate the children's of its citizens who travel to the middle. at least 2 fight for the so-called islamic state. official figures suggest about more than a 1000 german islamists went to syria and iraq should join i-s. half of them are still there now $119.00 of them are under arrest many in a kurdish refugee camp in northern syria the detainees they include 73 women now the return to form and former fighters and their families has been a topic of heated debate the 1st orphans of fighters have already been brought back
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