Sean “Diddy” Combs gave his Instagram followers a taste of his salsa moves by sharing a fun video of him dancing to the classic song “Pedro Navaja” by Rubén Blades.
“Salsa is something that fits my frequency and my vibration! I’m still recovering and still re-teaching myself how to walk. One of my goals is to learn how to dance salsa and go to every salsa club in the world that I can go to!! #RoadToRecovery,” the 47-year-old captioned the post. In the video, he starts off by clapping enthusiastically then shows off his steps to the dance that originated in the Caribbean.
“Salsa is something that fits my frequency and my vibration! I’m still recovering and still re-teaching myself how to walk. One of my goals is to learn how to dance salsa and go to every salsa club in the world that I can go to!! #RoadToRecovery,” the 47-year-old captioned the post. In the video, he starts off by clapping enthusiastically then shows off his steps to the dance that originated in the Caribbean.
- 4/24/2017
- by Thatiana Diaz
- PEOPLE.com
Matthew McConaughey's film is great, Atom Egoyan's is terrible and Spain and Greece delineate Europe's human dysfunction
• San Sebastián report: Jake Gyllenhaal's double
• San Sebastián report: Beatlemania and horseplay
The San Sebastián film festival gave us this week the best and worst of what Hollywood acting had to offer. Matthew McConaughey's performance in Dallas Buyers Club – such a hit recently in Toronto – reconfirmed his startling career surge, giving a barnstormer turn from deep in the heart of Texas as the homophobic good ol' boy who has to think hard about his attitudes when he is diagnosed HIV positive. Aside from that, however, there was a terrible clunker from Atom Egoyan: Devil's Knot – a grisly mediocrity of a film: shallow, badly acted and pretty questionable.
It is based on the child murders in West Memphis in 1993 which led to unsafe convictions of three young men: goth...
• San Sebastián report: Jake Gyllenhaal's double
• San Sebastián report: Beatlemania and horseplay
The San Sebastián film festival gave us this week the best and worst of what Hollywood acting had to offer. Matthew McConaughey's performance in Dallas Buyers Club – such a hit recently in Toronto – reconfirmed his startling career surge, giving a barnstormer turn from deep in the heart of Texas as the homophobic good ol' boy who has to think hard about his attitudes when he is diagnosed HIV positive. Aside from that, however, there was a terrible clunker from Atom Egoyan: Devil's Knot – a grisly mediocrity of a film: shallow, badly acted and pretty questionable.
It is based on the child murders in West Memphis in 1993 which led to unsafe convictions of three young men: goth...
- 9/26/2013
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
Includes world premieres of five Spanish productions and Oliver Stone’s documentary series The Untold History of the United States.Scroll down for full line-up
The Zabaltegi section at the 61st edition of the San Sebastian Festival (Sept 20-28) has been announced.
Along with the world premiere of five Spanish productions, other titles have also been programmed from countries such as Poland, South Korea and Kazakhstan, plus a 3D animated film and two documentaries to have competed at the Sundance Festival.
In addition, documentary series The Untold History of the United States, directed by Oliver Stone, will be presented in Spain for the first time as well as the new 206-minute epic Alexander: The Ultimate Cut, shot by the director in 2004.
Two Basque shorts will premiered within the section: Hotzanak, For Your Own Safety, by Izibene Oñederra, and Zela Trovke (Cutting Grass), by Asier Altuna.
Lav Diaz from the Philippines will also see the world premiere...
The Zabaltegi section at the 61st edition of the San Sebastian Festival (Sept 20-28) has been announced.
Along with the world premiere of five Spanish productions, other titles have also been programmed from countries such as Poland, South Korea and Kazakhstan, plus a 3D animated film and two documentaries to have competed at the Sundance Festival.
In addition, documentary series The Untold History of the United States, directed by Oliver Stone, will be presented in Spain for the first time as well as the new 206-minute epic Alexander: The Ultimate Cut, shot by the director in 2004.
Two Basque shorts will premiered within the section: Hotzanak, For Your Own Safety, by Izibene Oñederra, and Zela Trovke (Cutting Grass), by Asier Altuna.
Lav Diaz from the Philippines will also see the world premiere...
- 8/28/2013
- by michael.rosser@screendaily.com (Michael Rosser)
- ScreenDaily
Denis Villeneuve’s Enemy, starring Jake Gyllenhaal, will compete as part of the official selection of the 61st San Sebastian Film Festival (Sep 20-28).
At a press conference in Madrid today, festival director José Luis Rebordinos revealed the Spanish titles that will compete for the Golden Shell. Spanish films set to feature in other sections of the festival were also revealed.
Scroll down for full lists
Villeneuve’s Enemy stars Gyllenhaal as a man who seeks out his exact look-alike after spotting him in a film. The co-production between Canada (Rhombus Media) and Spain (Roxbury Pics) is Villeneuve’s follow-up to the Oscar-nominated Incendies.
David Trueba (Salamina Soldiers) will introduce Vivir es Facil (Living Is Easy). Set in 1966, Javier Cámara (Talk to Her) stars as an English teacher who sets off across Spain to find John Lennon, who was taking a break from Beatlemania to feature in Richard Lester film How I Won The War.
Manuel Martín Cuenca ([link...
At a press conference in Madrid today, festival director José Luis Rebordinos revealed the Spanish titles that will compete for the Golden Shell. Spanish films set to feature in other sections of the festival were also revealed.
Scroll down for full lists
Villeneuve’s Enemy stars Gyllenhaal as a man who seeks out his exact look-alike after spotting him in a film. The co-production between Canada (Rhombus Media) and Spain (Roxbury Pics) is Villeneuve’s follow-up to the Oscar-nominated Incendies.
David Trueba (Salamina Soldiers) will introduce Vivir es Facil (Living Is Easy). Set in 1966, Javier Cámara (Talk to Her) stars as an English teacher who sets off across Spain to find John Lennon, who was taking a break from Beatlemania to feature in Richard Lester film How I Won The War.
Manuel Martín Cuenca ([link...
- 7/24/2013
- by jsardafr@hotmail.com (Juan Sarda)
- ScreenDaily
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