tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle May 17, 2022 8:30am-9:00am CEST
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rowing and young people clearly have the solutions. the future belongs to the 77 percent every weekend on d w. ah, if you ride on social media, let's go and do that. immediate service profile. sure story. news my purchase to was law. that the busiest doberman see both of these we do have to start with an ability to look at her sounds deeply. and that's something that most of us are really quite afraid to. ah,
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we thrilling documentary about brushing opposition leader alexey. no volley. an african american fight racism in violence through her art. a new approach to dealing with looted art and a preview of the can film festival. but 1st, russian pan group pussy riot protest the war in ukraine. they're back and as raucous as their bomb ration punk collected, pussy right. and they have one central theme. vladimir putin and rushes war on you crime the
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put is they, they need to war. they cannot leave without that. it's totally hippocratic and it's all for it's all just decorations for stealing money and builds all this really. and the artist wishes which are now confiscated. the final rehearsals, maria laqueena, is often called to hooligan and enemy of the state inside russia is again making international headlines. in life, april, she escaped house the rest in moscow, evading police surveillance threats as a food delivery korea. she crossed the border under a false identity. if you go out, they will immediately arrest you. if, how happened was me like 6 times. so that's why i didn't decide jude not to use the front door. i want to perform, i want to speak out about against the war ah, in ukraine and i once myself and as to be heard in
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2011 maria latino became one of pussy writes founding members. she took part in their protests and stood trial. now she's taking to the stage to protest a war though in russia the media is banned from calling it a war. her lyrics tell of a blood drenched world and moscow going up in flames. songs that could make it difficult for her to return to russia any time soon. maria laqueena is no stranger to state repression. she's been sentenced to prison and made to wear an electronic ankle bracelet. all of that for nothing. i mean, sometimes for my instagram boy, sometimes just for working the streets. so for just being myself, ah, at this point she no longer fears the stage. she's looked through too much for that . 10 years ago, pussy right storm the alter it moscow's christ,
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the savior cathedral bay stage to park prayer in protest to vladimir putin and the power of the church. from that day on the collective became a thorn in the side of the russian state. the rests will follow to buy a show child for their 41 seconds of resistance. the collective faced 7 years in prison after an international outcry and to campaign by amnesty international, the sentence was reduced to 2 years in a labor camp. their protests continued radical, unexpected, and illegal to day pussy wright has gone global. there activists are impossible to contain anyone who is doing pussy right activities. pushy right, it's not membership club is free. i mean, if you want to do something as a push or i please do these days, pussy light has focused it's activism outside russian calling for protests inside
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russia is extremely dangerous. some goal for action appears at internet all political beliefs surrounds their flights. so it's not only me, if you ride on social media, let's go and do that. immediately arrested from fled. maria anaconda is cautious about disclosing too much of her future plans. all her new home knowing full well that the russian intelligence service is not only brutal, but also active abroad. a decade on a pussy right remains a voice and a force to be reckoned with. i love drugs as furniture. i mean i know so many people reach you guys don't know and they are raising buys. i will never be any hopeful or optimistic about which is i think they all should go to trip or now
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and to present a teeth. 9 fellow kremlin critic, alexey no vonny, also lives dangerously. a new film about putin's nemesis has all the hallmarks of a political thriller. and my message for there, ah, station when i am killed is very simple, not give up. what would he want to say to his followers if he's killed? that's the chilling question. canadian filmmaker daniel roar, asks russian opposition leader alexis vonny in this compelling documentary that has all the elements of a thriller. the story begins on august 22nd 2021 is seriously ill. alexi vonny was brought to berlin's shockey tay hospital. his wife accompanied him from russia to germany. lab results confirmed that he'd
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been poisoned with a deadly russian nerve agent. miraculously, nevada survived the volley was in the black forest of southwestern germany recovering from the attack. when daniel wor, 1st met him, the scene itself was extraordinary, was almost out of the film. it was grey and misty with these fields that had the sort of ash and sat and then of only himself amongst the serv grade tonality is this bright light. who was funny and charismatic. he was very engaged with the filming processor for his performers. every theatrical the film followed nevada only for months. investigative journalist group bellingham soon found documents proving that no volley had been poisoned on route from siberia. with nova chug, a nerve agent developed and produced at moscow state research institute. it's been used against putin's enemies world wide. the names and faces of novalis
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suspected poison ers were identify 2 members of russia's feared, secret service exposed as bungling amateurs their e mail or their very thought bras. guy from intelligence was hacked several time and he was the 1st password was more school one, and they hacked him. so he is 2nd, he is best what was more school to and they hacked him as well. and so at the 3rd time, he had special moscow 3 and just the guests, what was the his 4th breast? 4th, if we have this idea in our heads, that russian spies are the best in the world. but what i found is that it didn't take much to really put together a forensic portrait of just how done these guys are. his film just had it's german premier at munich, duck fest film festival. the war and ukraine makes its message all the more timely war says rushes, not just put him. it's people like nevada,
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me to the most important thing that i had to still remind me of the world. and i had to remind all of you is atlanta who is not russia, and russia is not lavender. at the heart of the film is the recording of a call. no volley made to one of the men who poisoned him. using a fake name, he duped the military chemist constant to include 3 access into describing how they did it. what a cooler you didn't have to have any language skills says to know exactly what was going on and the magnitude of what we were doing. the phone call in the film, i think is 11 minutes. but in actuality, it was about an hour, and alexa maintained his performance. for that 4550 minutes. the video went viral. within hours, millions watched it on youtube. navarro is a master of social media and a brilliant strategist. the fall knee is very conscious of his own image. he's very
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conscience conscious of how he comes across in the media. and so something that i was always aware of is how nevada me, the politician and the social media fi nom, was weapon ising in using daniel the filmmaker in january 2021 volley left berlin on a plane bound for moscow. he was taking a huge risk. there was no question in his mind that his objective, his goal, his prerogative was to be the moral leader of his nation, the moral compass of the russian federation. and to him, that meant going back was that the right decision? i don't know upon his arrival in moscow, the volley was arrested at the airport. whether you agree with his politics or you don't, you can't help but be in awe of the man's spirit encourage. if there was fear was internal. i think part of alexi and a ball in this brand of masculinity is to not show your fear. in march
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now, volley was sentenced again to 9 years and a maximum security penal colony. but his fight goes on leave with almost in when you move your muscles mud in the so could you please let me soon? sure. store news man that the just the was law at the disease to gilbert community by from does do within of a museum in cologne, is also taking action about colonial plunder. the legendary benign bronzes in germany are due to return to nigeria soon. but 1st, some have gone on display with support from lake oath. for a long time these royal artifacts from the kingdom of been in, in what is now nigeria were in storage in cologne. removing the infantry numbers is almost a symbolic act to pass you lola. from oh,
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many of the objects from what was once the royal palace, recall a heritage that is deeply felt is like put to numbers. some people are putting them in jail. so picking them off is preparing them to go to benet taken of those marks that have nominally called jo ann's or would oper number's analysis, stoltz the collection of the route and strap used museum. cologne boasts 96 works of art, collectively known as the benign bronzes. that become the symbol of the debate around the restitution of the art looted during the colonial europe. the provenance of the objects is clear, the british colonial forces looted most of them during a brutal military ride in 1897, when they captured, been in city plundering the royal palace, killing thousands as where things were fallen to removed from the bed chamber alone. so the shrines of the palace and garden city and we
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went in for his walks to return combat quickly and come back safely. i miss you a different level. i miss you is the name of the exhibition organized by nanette snoop. the director of the route and stroke yost museum, she invited pairs you lie olla from the university of logos to participate as is still limited knowledge about the benign bronzes in germany. each treasure has its own showcase. the artifacts were made from wood, ivory, bronze, and terra cotta their heads, but also weapons and jewelry of varying styles. some are incredibly delicate it, oh, so feel lying. there are many very small, even very simple objects and they have always moved me here because i really love these objects. but i also feel the people behind them in those who missed them.
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when did he, who i can feel that to your spirit? my now, the ethnography museum is currently reinventing itself. then it's nope, has long supported demands that the looted art be returned and even those demands don't insist that every work about be repatriated. what also matters is the question of who owns the objects? for me, the most important thing is the change of when i, she that is a change of ha on does it a sin still essential for the future of ethnography? museums gave us the daughter what it means that i, as the director or we as a museum, james can no longer be the only one who can tell the story of these objects iffy a sin. can anybody so picked up at the moment, there are only a few original bronzes in been in city and just a few replicas, mainly in nigeria,
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national museum. there is currently a debate about what to do once the others are returned. the german government plans to transfer ownership of over 1200 priceless artifacts and artworks to nigeria before the end of 2022. but not everybody is in favor of returning the artworks into these in the back say there is something hidden behind this debate. she now behind the anger and emotion, what is that thus ist us. what is our post migrant society? and how will we encounter one another in the future? you're right in it, and under all, that's what this is about as well. all in especially about privileges and power relations. lots of people are worried about us who are have a fee to loiter angst. the supporting program for the i miss you. exhibition addresses such issues too. it also examines how the artifacts should be presented to the public. once they're back home in africa,
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the must be we which people are going to be engaged as walks in the context that is known in africa where art is not celebrated along with the syllabus, ellen, intakes of performance, music and poetry, and a dance. now for another artist who wants to broaden our perspective carry me, weems is among the most influential american artist today. her works take on racism and violence and are now on display in germany. ah with a. ready room in the artist herself on stage carrie may wiems her work problems the wounds of past and present it's
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challenging, discomfiting, even painful. the performance artist and photographer is preparing for her 1st solo exhibition in germany. titled the evidence of things not seen it showing at the written bag of chicago for high in stuttgart. can people with a different perspective and cultural background even grasp the artist's work? a, it might not be an easy task for the silly interesting question achieve poached actually, because why would you i think actually that in some ways the work is for you. a great i, the work is really for you. it is, it's my gift to receive the artist gift. we have to unpack the message.
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racism has a long history, not only in the united states and weems recreate scenes of violence and depression . she also uses historical footage to commemorate resistance. our goal is to broaden and challenge our perspective and sometimes her own to she even borrows our camera for a bit. but we do have to start this inability to look at ourselves deeply. and that's something that most of us are really quite afraid to. because looking at the truth, looking at who we are is very, very difficult, but most difficult thing that we do in the course of our lives. and every day we wake up striving to be our soul sells in every day the blind to failing a. but it is the effort
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ah, wiems doesn't shy away from asking uncomfortable questions. what is shown in our art museums and what is left out. ringback who made the artworks on display? and what does the architecture tell us? look, runs through my little images that are behind me. the ideas that have to do with architecture that have to do with structures that have to do with ancient structures as well as contemporary structures working around the world, looking at the way in which architecture, for instance, talks to us and tells us something about power. about power structures. who holes power? ah, posing questions and questioning the status quo for carrie may weems,
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that's the essence of her work. she recreate scenes from everyday life to illuminate how we live and live together. like in her kitchen table series, which she created 40 years ago. one of those are the pieces that sort of breaks through the conversation around where is it starts to look at the relationship of men and women in questions about monogamy. questions about marriage and family and the relationship of, of work and what a woman wants. a little woman needs supposed to a what men are thinking about how she's relating to her children, how she is relating to her friends. the kitchen table is the thing that we do in our kitchen table. we examine our lives. carrie, may, we're an artist who leaves her audience with as many questions as answers in there. rolling out the red carpet at cannes with glitz glamour and films galore.
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the cannes film festival is back in full glory can is taking off and looking to be top gun again as the world's most acclaimed film festival returns after 2 years of covert pandemic disruption. 2 years that put the brakes on the release of top gun, maverick, which will finally have its international launch in can. why is that sort of lash mystery? sure, hampton pete. no more than 35 years after the 1900. 86 original tom cruises. resurrection of the famous fighter pilot is symbolic of the festivals own resurgence. good morning aviators. this is your captain speaking. another sure fire red carpet draw scottish actress. tilda swinton returns in george miller's fantasy romance, 3000 years of longing,
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co starring address elbow cans. movie magic is worlds away from the war in ukraine, but the conflict will be front and center in discussions at the festival as well as in several films screening where for instance, in butterfly vision, a cheque ukrainian co production about a ukranian female soldier struggling with p t sd ukrainian director said again, lawson it's, i uses archive material from world war 2. in his new documentary, he questions the ethics of bombing civilian populations. as he explains in a video interview. i miss you. i the saddest thing is that right now we're seeing how these on learned lessons of the past are coming back to haunt us, ultimately sob. yes, there should be some laws or legal structures or agreements to ban the use of these methods of mass destruction or mass destruction of civilians as
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a kind of permitted war strategy. so green is, is killers from political relevance to sheer entertainment. this year is competition and can is expected to be one of the best line ups in years with high hopes for the usual heavy combination of new faces. veteran pros and former winners like ali, a bossy, the award winning iranian danish director. his new film holy spider presents a very different view of iran than usually portrayed in the country cinema. a serial killer new are that a boss he never thought can, would accept. i'm tired of this, put it above the run. and 3rd of like everything being so like under stated metaphorical or, you know, taste full and distant and not true. basically. and this is really the business realism, as much as the cinematic realism goes. of course, you know, i,
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we hear women, they do have bodies, they do have here. they do like have sexuality. they are human beings, you know, we've wanted to come to the body as an object of fascination and revulsion. has long been the obsession of canadian filmmaker david cronan burg, after an acre height as the master of body horror dusted off a 20 year old script for his new film. crime was of the future. unexpected highlight for can ah, like what am i with the body particularly vigor. mortensen leads a star studded cast, does a performance artist showcasing the metamorphosis of his own organs, things around that to find new organ that were seen crimes the future looks like a returned to form for cronan burke and fans of weird and avant garde cinema will have plenty to watch at this year's festival, but tan wouldn't be can,
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if it didn't provide a bit of that old razzmatazz by what, which elvis is sure to deliver into a superhero. oh. 6 bad norman's biopics during austin butler as the king of rock and roll and tom hanks. as his manager, colonel tom parker is a romp through the good, the bad and the ugly of american culture. with elvis portrayed in the director's own words as the original super hero. with after 2 years of covered restrictions raining on its parade can, is counting on its singular mix of red carpet, glamour and cutting edge cinema to market. and celebrate the global return of the
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showers time to get under the skin, out sensitive a and to read a whole load of tips that will work wonders. those who want to be beautiful in good shape, 90 min on d, w. o. one of main kinds, oldest ambitions could be within reach or what is it really is possible to reverse aging researchers and scientists all over the world torino
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this is the use life from berlin after nearly 3 months on the seed. ukrainian soldiers have finally left the as of stealth steel works in mario ukraine, has the severely wounded soldiers says that they will be taken to russian held territory. it thought they could be exchanged for russian prisons also on the program. turkish president, reggie had time at one threatened to block bids by finland and sweden to join nato .
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