ゲット スマート

往年のTVシリーズを、派手なアクションシーンを加えてリメイクしたスパイ・コメディ

極秘諜報機関「コントロール」で情報分析官を務めているスマートの夢は、エージェントとなって活躍する事。ある日「コントロール」本部が犯罪組織 「カオス」襲われ、すべてのエージェントの身元が知られてしまう。そのため、顔が知られていないスマートはエージェント昇格整形した美人エージェン ト99と組んで、カオスの陰謀暴く使命を受ける。張り切るスマートだが、失敗の連続。しかしついに敵ボスの居場所を突き止める

本作は、60年代にアメリカで人気を博したTVスパイシリーズの映画化だ(日本では「それ行けスマート」のタイトル)。設定はオリジナルを踏襲して いるらしいが、ストーリーは現代風に新たに書かれたものだ。リメイクにありがちな、爆発やカーチェイスといった「お約束」の派手なアクションが加味されて いるが、主人公のスマートを演じているのが、『40歳の童貞男』でブレイクしたスティーブ・カレル。をザ・ロックから改名したドウェイン・ジョンソン や、人気TVドラマ「HEROES/ヒーローズ」のマシ・オカ、ベテランのアラン・アーキン、テレンス・スタンプ、ジェイムズ・カーンといった面々がしっ かりと固めており、何かと楽しめる。

ブーリン家の姉妹

ナタリー・ポートマン、スカーレット・ヨハンソンの共演で贈る、世界を変えた、美しくも哀しい運命の恋の物語。

16世紀、イングランド。20年にわたる夫婦生活で王女メアリーしかもうける事が出来なかったヘンリー8世はの目下の関心事は、立派な男子の世継ぎ をあげる事。一族の富と権力を高めるため、新興貴族のトーマス・ブーリンは自慢の娘アンを差し出す。しかし、王が目をとめたのは清純で心優しい妹のメア リー。姉より先に結婚したばかりのメアリーは夫と共に、王の愛人となるべく宮廷にあがる。アンは姉でありながら、結婚も王の愛人という立場も妹に奪われて しまったのだ。一族の発展のための企みが、次第にアンとメアリーのを、王の愛を巡る非情な対立へと変えていく…。

歴史的に有名なヘンリー8世とアンの関係ではなく、王の寵愛を巡る姉妹の確執に焦点を当てたフィリッパ・グレゴリーのベストセラー小説を映画化。裏 切り策略渦巻く宮廷で、ブーリン家の2人の姉妹・アンとメアリーが、父と叔父の野望によって、イングランド王の寵愛を巡る運命に翻弄されていく姿を描 く。出演は、ブーリン家の姉妹にナタリー・ポートマンとスカーレット・ヨハンソン。姉妹の寵愛の対象となるヘンリー8世に『トロイ』『ミュンヘン』のエ リック・バナ。監督は、本作が劇場用映画としては第1回作品となるイギリスの俊英ジャスティン・チャドウィック。

マルタのやさしい刺繍

遅咲きの乙女たちが紡ぎだす、最高にかわいらしくて、心あたたまる物語

スイスの小さな村、トループ村。最愛の夫に先立たれ生きる気力をなくしていた80歳のマルタは、意気消沈しながら毎日をただ何となく過ごしていた。 そんなある日、彼女は忘れかけていた若かりし頃の夢、“自分でデザインをして刺繍をした、ランジェリー・ショップをオープンさせること”を思い出す。しか し保守的な村では、マルタの夢はただ周りから冷笑され軽蔑されるだけ。それでもマルタは友人3人とともに夢を現実のものとするために動き出す。スイスの伝 統的な小さな村に広がる、夢に向かって頑張るマルタと彼女を支える仲間たちの夢と希望の輪。マルタの刺繍が、人々の心をやさしくあたたかく紡いでゆく…。

変化を恐れるのではなく、それをチャンスと受け止めて新しい一歩を踏み出すことにより、成長していく人々の姿を描きだす、勇気と希望に満ち溢れた心 あたたまる物語。スイス本国で2006年の動員数No.1に輝き、社会現象となるほど大ヒットを記録した。監督は、新鋭女性監督ベティナ・オベルリ。

P.S. アイラヴユー

ニューヨークからアイルランドへ—大切なものを探す旅

最愛の夫ジェリーを脳腫瘍で亡くしたばかりのホリーは、失意で電話にも出られず自宅に引きこもっていた。やがてホリーの30歳の誕生日がやってきた。届いた贈物の箱を開けてみると、テープレコーダーに入ったジェリーからのメッセージが。思わぬプレゼントに喜びと驚きを隠せないホリー。翌日、メッセージの通りジェリーからの手紙が届けられた。それから、次々と消印のない手紙がホリーのもとに届くようになる…。

元アイルランド首相を父に持つ女性作家セシリア・アハーンが、弱冠21歳で書き上げたデビュー作を映画化。すでに全世界40カ国以上でベストセラーとなっているという。主演は2度のオスカーに輝くヒラリー・スワンクと、女性に圧倒的な人気を誇るジェラルド・バトラーの二人。愛する者を突然失った悲しみと、それを乗り越え新たなスタートを切るまでの心の葛藤、そして、周囲の者たちはどう接したらいいのか—ニューヨークの街並みとアイルランドの広大な風景が登場人物を包み込む。物語の後半、ジェリーの“指示”に従いホリーたちが旅するアイルランドの山野は、筆舌に尽しがたい美しさだ。

S.H.Eが“肌身離さぬ”私物を大放出のチャリティー・オークション—台北市

2008年10月5日、ニューアルバム「FM S.H.E」の大ヒットを記念して、人気ユニットのS.H.Eがファンへの感謝をこめた私物出品のチャリティーオークションを開催。会場となった台北市内の繁華街・西門町には大勢のファンが殺到した。中時電子報が伝えた。

S.H.E が私物を大放出する今回のオークションには、約5000人のファンが殺到。メンバーのHebeは、愛用の腕時計を胸の谷間にはさんでみせるパフォーマンス で会場を沸かせ、それに対抗したEllaは化粧ポーチを太ももにはさんでみせた。いずれも希望者がどんどん値段を吊り上げ、それぞれ約2万NTドル(約6 万5000円)という高値で落札された。

Selina が出品したお手製のアクセサリーは、熱狂的な男性ファン2人が戦いを繰り広げた末、6000NTドル(約2万円)で落札された。なお、この日の収益金は自 動福利聯盟文教基金会に寄付され、恵まれない子供たちへの援助金に利用されるという。(翻訳・編集/Mathilda)

Germany reaches deal to bail out Hypo

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- Germany on Sunday guaranteed all private bank accounts and negotiated a 50 billion euros ($69 billion) bailout deal for Hypo Real Estate AG as Europe's second largest economy sought to ward off financial crisis.

The Finance Ministry and private banks reached a deal late Sunday to infuse an additional line of credit worth up to 15 billion euros ($21 billion) into the embattled real estate giant, expanding on an earlier 35 billion euro ($48 billion) bailout plan that would have found the government and private banks splitting the bill.

The earlier deal fell apart Saturday when Hypo announced that a consortium of unnamed financial institutions had backed out. That prompted banking executives and lawmakers to convene in the capital for feverish talks toward the new deal they unveiled late Sunday.

The new package includes the original 35 billion euros ($48.4 billion) plan with the government paying up to 27 billion euros ($37 billion) of that sum and banks funding the remainder as a line of credit.

New is an additional 15 billion euro ($21 billion) line of insured credit from the banks.

The ministry said in a statement that the new deal would "strengthen the financial community of Germany in difficult times."

Earlier Sunday, Germany joined Ireland and Greece in taking drastic independent measures to protect its private citizens by guaranteeing all private bank and savings accounts as well as time deposits, or CDs.

Finance Ministry spokesman Torsten Albig said the unlimited guarantee covered some 568 billion euros ($785 billion) in investments.

Chancellor Angela Merkel vowed that she would not let the failure of any company disrupt the German economy.

"We will not allow the distress of one financial institution to distress the entire system," she told reporters.

Merkel said the plan would ensure that anyone who made reckless market decisions would be made to answer for their actions.

Hypo was the first German blue chip to seek a government rescue. It rant into trouble in mid-September as credit froze on international markets after its Dublin-based unit, Depfa Bank PLC, failed to attract needed short-term funding amid the widening credit crunch.

A spokesman for Ireland's department of finance said the government would not help Germany bail out Hypo or its subsidiary.

Sunday's emergency meeting came a day after Europe's four major economic powers called for tighter regulation in a bid to stop the fiscal bleeding wrought by turmoil on Wall Street -- though Germany, France, Britain and Italy shied away from advocating a massive bailout akin to that in the United States, where Congress approved a $700 billion plan last week.

European governments have pumped billions of euros into banks to keep them afloat over the last week, trying to assure savers their money was safe and avert a panic that has frozen lending across the world.

“世界最低”の豪華ホテル、完成予想図を公開—上海

2日付中国新聞社電によると上海市でこのほど、“世界最低”のロケーションになる見込みの豪華ホテルの完成予想図が公開された。
  同ホテルの名称は「天坑酒店」で、建設地は上海市郊外の観光地、余山国家旅游度仮区内の巨大穴「天坑」の底。「天坑」は平地に垂直に掘られた採石場跡で、 底部の標高は海面下87メートル。完成すれば、人工穴の底の“世界で最も低い”位置にある豪華ホテルになる見込みという。

'Constant Gardener' writer was a real-life spy

LONDON, England (AP) -- The spying game is not what it used to be.

"We saw ourselves almost as people with a priestly calling to tell the truth," John le Carre says of his days as a spy.

That is a matter of regret for John le Carre, eminent novelist and former spy, who has done more than almost any other writer to forge our idea of how the game is played.

Ian Fleming's action-hero James Bond may be more famous, but le Carre's universe has the ring of truth. His secret agents exist in a world of stalemate, moral compromise, ambiguity and betrayal.

That's again the terrain of his 21st novel, "A Most Wanted Man," but in some ways the landscape has changed. The end of the Cold War changed things. The September 11 attacks changed them again, revealing a frightening new menace and adding a glossary of chilling new terms -- "war on terror," "extraordinary rendition" -- to our common language.

"I have no nostalgia for the Cold War," says le Carre, who worked for British intelligence in Germany in the 1960s, when tensions with the Soviet Union were at their chilliest. "I think I have nostalgia for the hope that existed during the Cold War that when it ended we would redesign the world. We never did that. We missed the whole trick."

"A Most Wanted Man," which comes out October 7, is set firmly in our jittery post-9/11 world. Le Carre locates the action in Hamburg, Germany, the port city where several of the 9/11 hijackers planned their attacks. Its central character is Issa, an enigmatic half-Chechen refugee who appears in Hamburg sporting a long black coat, muddy motives and a claim to a mysterious fortune.

To Annabel Richter, an idealistic young human rights lawyer who takes up his case, Issa is a challenge. To the German, British and American spies who hone in on him, he is a possible asset and a potential threat.

Le Carre is fascinated by the way globalization and immigration have brought disparate peoples closer together, without bridging the gaps in culture, wealth and experience that divide them. Despite attempts at mutual understanding, the novel's characters are on a collision course.

"We know so little, we understand so little, about Islam -- the cultural differences that separate us, the thought processes that separate us," says the writer, whose real name is David Cornwell. "It's very difficult to find a common ground. I'm not offering solutions here, but trying to paint a moment in our time. I'm very hung up on trying to catch the moment of where we are and trying to make a neat little story that reflects our feelings."

Since his breakthrough book, "The Spy Who Came in From the Cold," in 1963, le Carre has become one of Britain's most successful writers. Many of his books -- most recently "The Constant Gardener" -- have been turned into films. His books may be categorized as thrillers, but they are reviewed as serious novels.

Nan Graham, editor-in-chief at le Carre's U.S. publisher, Scribner, says he transcends genres. "As a storyteller, he's simply one of the best we have," she said.

She said le Carre "has always put his characters in a moral maze. And I think this book, which is partly about the War on Terror, makes it clear that the War on Terror is fraught with as much moral ambiguity as the Cold War."

Le Carre lives with his wife Jane in a house high above the rugged coast of southwest England, and in a large home in one of London's leafiest nooks. Sitting amid the book-lined walls and solid wooden furniture of his London house, he looks the picture of middle-class contentment, a white-haired 76-year-old wearing a hearing aid and a gray sleeveless sweater.

But he is not mellowing into old age. His conversation, like his writing, fizzes with a moral outrage that is at odds with his kindly, avuncular manner.

The enemy in his new book is not just terrorism, but also the treachery and betrayal of supposed allies. Le Carre's German spies are caught between their own goals and the demands of impatient American colleagues, depicted as willing to cut a few ethical corners in the cause of neutralizing a perceived threat.

Le Carre can see the criticism coming.

"I don't expect a terribly warm reception in the United States," he says. "I'm not anti-American. But I'm certainly anti the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld disaster of the last eight years." Like many liberal Europeans, he feels that the United States has been "hijacked."

America has claimed the right "to seize any citizen of any country whom it deems offensive to it," he says. "America has licensed torture. In the end, I ask the same question that I've been asking through a whole lot of books: How much of this stuff can we do to ourselves in protection of our democracy and remain a democracy worth protecting?"

The book has more personal concerns. The three central characters -- Issa, Annabel and Tommy Brue, a careworn British banker -- have fathers who cast long shadows their offspring struggle to shake off.

"All of us are molded much more than we ever want to let on by our parental origins and the way we are brought up and the angers of our childhood," says le Carre.

The intersection of psychology and ideology, politics and the personal, is prime le Carre territory.

His own father, a charming con man and fraudster, helped propel him into storytelling and spying, two creative forms of deception. Le Carre drew on that background for his most autobiographical novel, "A Perfect Spy," which charts a boy's induction into a life of personal and professional deceit.

Le Carre has been a full-time writer for more than four decades, and kept silent for years about his time as a spy. These days he's more willing to discuss it, although he says he never became more than a "very lowly" operative. His career in espionage was ended by the British double agent Kim Philby, who exposed him and dozens of other British agents to the Soviets.

If the author has a surrogate in the novel, it's Gunther Bachmann, a mid-ranking German intelligence official who upholds the values worth preserving.

"I'm with Bachmann, instinctively," le Carre says. He stands for all the "really good field men and field women" in spy agencies everywhere.

"They're not interventionists, they're not judgmental. But they have a knack for it -- they can listen at the bazaars, they know how to befriend people, how to manipulate them. How to do a deal with them and stick to the deal.

"Intelligence work at its best is academic, it's human, it's earthy and it's vocational. It's not about how to break somebody's neck on a dark night."

Le Carre comes from a generation of spies that was shocked by the way intelligence was manipulated to make the case for war in Iraq, through the British government's infamous "dodgy dossier" and other exaggerated claims about Saddam Hussein's alleged weapons of mass destruction.

"In my day -- in the spook world -- we saw ourselves almost as people with a priestly calling to tell the truth," he said. "We didn't shape it or mold it. We were there, we thought, to speak truth to power. I never had any sense of the stories being twisted to suit the political requirements."

Idealism in a spy? Perhaps it's less unlikely than it sounds. Like his books, le Carre is a mix of unblinking realism and hopeful humanism. His characters struggle valiantly to do the right thing. They usually fail.

"I think there is a great deal of human affection in this book," he says. "But I don't think there's much optimism."