Promising the moon



It really started at Sundance last January. The legendary US film festival is generally regarded as the breaking ground for the finest in independent cinema from around the world. For a first-time feature director, seeking not only the magical word-of-mouth buzz only a positive Sundance can generate, but also, more prosaically, a US distribution deal, the pressure was immense. Before the screening, the 38-year old Duncan Jones (christened Zowie Bowie) was probably best known, if known at all, for being the son of the rock legend David Bowie and for directing a brilliantly bizarre UK television commercial for oven chips.

After the 97-minute screening, he was being feted as one of the hottest new talents of the year and his film rated an instant sci-fi classic. (And he got the distribution deal, too.) Nearly a year later, a mildly jet-lagged Jones is in an LA hotel room, talking to me at 6am, through our laptops, in a final piece of promotion for the film, which is scheduled to screen at the Dubai International Film Festival's Cinema of the World programme this month. The intervening 11 months since Sundance have been a frantic blur of activity. Today, he is preparing for a round of meetings in LA as he crews up in preparation for his next project, a Jake Gyllenhaal ("a very lovely guy") film called Source Code that was offered to him complete with Hollywood star power, facilities and budget. It's a giant step for the director, who is cheerfully embracing the Hollywood machine with the good-natured air of confidence he has been nurturing over the past year.

"It's interesting," he says, of his first megabucks, all-singing, all-dancing project. "It's a much bigger budget, it's a Hollywood film, there are a lot more people involved in the decision-making process. I think my background in advertising is a benefit - I'm somewhere between trying to please everyone else and trying to maintain the integrity of what it is I would like to do as a director. So it's not too different to doing a commercial, to be honest, but it's definitely a different beast to Moon."

Moon, like the best science fiction, is not only a study of the myriad interfaces between man and machine, it's a complex and dynamic spin into deep human inner space too, exploring identity, loneliness and the sinister power exerted upon us by global industry. It is also a great story that will keep you guessing and gasping in disbelief throughout. It's the story of Sam Bell, an ordinary guy who at some unspecified point in the near future is nearing the end of a three-year stint manning Lunar Corporation's base station, on the far side of the moon. His job is to oversee the extraction and earthbound dispatch of Helium-3, a precious mineral that has saved the world from a global energy crisis.

Following an accident during a routine expedition in a lunar rover, Sam awakens in a sick bay, back at the base. And soon, what he believed to be hallucinations take on a scary reality as he realises not only is someone in the space station with him, but it happens to be a version of himself, three years younger, just arrived from Earth. As the two Sams circle each other warily trying to work out just what is going on, a deeper story unfolds - and things really start getting strange.

In the lead role - just about the only role aside from Kevin Spacey's pitch-perfect, deadpan voicing of Sam's minder, a pernickety computer named Gerty - is Sam Rockwell. A long-time fan of the actor, Jones initially approached him to propose a bit-part in another project. Rockwell politely demurred and instead, the pair began bonding over their shared love of classic sci-fi cinema. "I was already a big fan of his," remembers Jones. "I've always found him a really engaging, charismatic actor and during that meeting, we started talking about the kind of roles Sam would be interested in playing and the kind of films he loves. And there was this period in the Seventies and Eighties, especially films like Outlands with Sean Connery and Silent Running with Bruce Dern, or Ridley Scott's original Alien, where you got sort of blue-collar, working people in space. And we thought, how cool it would be to make a film like that -"

Having recently read Robert Zubrin's, Entering Space, in which the author makes a convincing argument for future human colonisation of the solar system in search of vital energy resources, Jones began toying with the idea of a giant power corporation, setting up mining facilities on the lunar landscape. Jones also drew on some particularly unhappy memories of life studying for a postgraduate degree in Nashville during his late twenties. Given that the experience formed the basis of Sam Bell's mental maelstrom in Moon, Jones must have had one hell of a miserable time. ("That three-year period gave me an insight into what it must have been to be alone for that period of time.")

Getting Nathan Parker (the son of the veteran British director Alan) on board to work on a script, he and Jones refined the story through a few more drafts before Moon was complete. The arduous process of raising funds began. They managed to raise just under US$5 million (Dh18m). "For a first feature indie," says Jones, "$5 million is quite a lot. For a science-fiction feature it's tiny. But it gives you a certain amount of freedom - expectations are lower in some ways. We knew the very best way to squeeze the best value out of the money we had."

Jones and his crew used a tiny enclosed set at London's Shepperton studios, deliberately retro in style, reminiscent of the space station interiors of his favourite sci-fi films. "It was very claustrophobic," he remembers. "It certainly put you in the right mind-frame, with the limitations of the set and that definitely gave the film a style -" Coming from an advertising background, Jones' fluency with special effects and visual trickery was translated into Moon's determinedly low-key feel. Far more nerve-racking for the director was the prospect of working with Rockwell, who played both incarnations of his character - the befuddled, tired man and the younger, sharper aggressive Sam, both of whom appear and interact together on screen for long stretches of the film. Co-ordinating the two, without over-reliance on effects, saw some inspired choreography and meticulous planning.

"We had a couple of techniques. We'd get him to film one side of the scene to the point where we could say, yeah, that's the take we're going to use. And as he went off for a make-up and wardrobe change, we'd put that take on an iPlayer and he'd listen to it again and again and rehearse to those timings. Then, when he came back downstairs, we'd give him an eye-line and explain where he needed to look and we'd put an earwig in his ear, so he could hear the audio of the take. Then he would have the conversation with himself, with the audio being played back to him through his ear. So it was technically incredibly complicated and must have been very difficult for him, but he did an amazing job."

The result is a film with a deep understanding of the questions and philosophical conundrums that beguile each and every one of us. "Even people who aren't science fiction fans like it," says Jones. "But it's a really human-centric story, the sci-fi is just a dressing for the story. It's what it's like to be alone and what it's like to meet yourself in a literal sense. I think that's something that everyone can relate to."

Before Source Code, Jones had been enthusiastically preparing the follow-up to Moon, a dark, noir-ish thriller, again set in the future, but this time in a scarily bleak, dystopic Berlin. The city holds a special significance for Jones, as it was there he spent some time with his father in the late 1970s as the latter recorded his legendary album Heroes. The grim, sinister atmosphere of the then-divided city served him perfectly when it came to imagining the setting for Mute, which Jones considers a homage to another of his favourite films, Blade Runner.

"I remember Berlin from when I was a kid. We were there when the wall was there and back then Berlin really was isolated and really scary. My dad was recording at the time, and his studio was right by the wall. You could hear the gunshots going off as you could hear the East Berlin police shooting at people as they tried to escape. It was a strange place. "And although the geopolitics of the Berlin I will be showing will be different to that, it will still have that vibe, which I'd like to capture."

Of course, growing up the son of one of the most charismatic and influential figures of the past 50 years leaves a mark. Jones remembers childhood games with his father, making stop-animation home movies of the pair of them leaping around the house, and conversely, poor Bowie's desperate attempts to interest his son in a musical career; "I just wasn't interested." But being caught up in his father's omnivorous web of cultural influences and obsessions left its mark. "Well, when I was a kid growing up I was seeing the same films he was watching," says Jones. "I think film was something we really bonded over - he introduced me to Kubrick's 2001 and all those films, and they affected me as much as they affected him. So I guess it's just that subconscious same pool of conscience that we have."

Jones' close relationship with his father is evident - Bowie even unexpectedly appeared at Sundance to support his son - but Jones quietly makes it clear he is his own man. Resigned to being known as the rock legend's filmmaker son for a little more time yet, he still jokingly predicts that in the future, David Bowie might be asked whether he is really the father of Duncan Jones. Given the quality of Moon and the busy months ahead, that scenario might not seem so far-fetched after all.

Moon is showing tonight at 7pm at Mall of the Emirates 3. For more details and tickets see www.dubaifilmfest.com.

The Brutalist

Director: Brady Corbet

Stars: Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce, Joe Alwyn

Rating: 3.5/5

FIRST TEST SCORES

England 458
South Africa 361 & 119 (36.4 overs)

England won by 211 runs and lead series 1-0

Player of the match: Moeen Ali (England)

 

UPI facts

More than 2.2 million Indian tourists arrived in UAE in 2023
More than 3.5 million Indians reside in UAE
Indian tourists can make purchases in UAE using rupee accounts in India through QR-code-based UPI real-time payment systems
Indian residents in UAE can use their non-resident NRO and NRE accounts held in Indian banks linked to a UAE mobile number for UPI transactions

MATCH INFO

Everton v Tottenham, Sunday, 8.30pm (UAE)

Match is live on BeIN Sports

The specs

Engine: 3.9-litre twin-turbo V8

Transmission: seven-speed

Power: 620bhp

Torque: 760Nm

Price: Dh898,000

On sale: now

Anti-semitic attacks
The annual report by the Community Security Trust, which advises the Jewish community on security , warned on Thursday that anti-Semitic incidents in Britain had reached a record high.

It found there had been 2,255 anti-Semitic incidents reported in 2021, a rise of 34 per cent from the previous year.

The report detailed the convictions of a number of people for anti-Semitic crimes, including one man who was jailed for setting up a neo-Nazi group which had encouraged “the eradication of Jewish people” and another who had posted anti-Semitic homemade videos on social media. 

The winners

Fiction

  • ‘Amreekiya’  by Lena Mahmoud
  •  ‘As Good As True’ by Cheryl Reid

The Evelyn Shakir Non-Fiction Award

  • ‘Syrian and Lebanese Patricios in Sao Paulo’ by Oswaldo Truzzi;  translated by Ramon J Stern
  • ‘The Sound of Listening’ by Philip Metres

The George Ellenbogen Poetry Award

  • ‘Footnotes in the Order  of Disappearance’ by Fady Joudah

Children/Young Adult

  •  ‘I’ve Loved You Since Forever’ by Hoda Kotb 
Results:

5pm: Maiden (PA) Dh80,000 1,400m | Winner: Eghel De Pine, Pat Cosgrave (jockey), Eric Lemartinel (trainer)

5.30pm: Maiden (PA) Dh80,000 1,400m | Winner: AF Sheaar, Szczepan Mazur, Saeed Al Shamsi

6pm: Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan National Day Cup (PA) Group 3 Dh500,000 1,600m | Winner: RB Torch, Fabrice Veron, Eric Lemartinel

6.30pm: Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan National Day Cup (TB) Listed Dh380,000 1,600m | Winner: Forjatt, Chris Hayes, Nicholas Bachalard

7pm: Wathba Stallions Cup for Private Owners Handicap (PA) Dh 70,000 1,400m | Winner: Hawafez, Connor Beasley, Ridha ben Attia

7.30pm: Handicap (PA) Dh 80,000 1,600m | Winner: Qader, Richard Mullen, Jean de Roaulle

MATCH INFO

Liverpool v Manchester City, Sunday, 8.30pm UAE

Five films to watch

Castle in the Sky (1986)

Grave of the Fireflies (1988)

Only Yesterday (1991)

Pom Poki (1994)

The Tale of Princess Kaguya (2013)

School counsellors on mental well-being

Schools counsellors in Abu Dhabi have put a number of provisions in place to help support pupils returning to the classroom next week.

Many children will resume in-person lessons for the first time in 10 months and parents previously raised concerns about the long-term effects of distance learning.

Schools leaders and counsellors said extra support will be offered to anyone that needs it. Additionally, heads of years will be on hand to offer advice or coping mechanisms to ease any concerns.

“Anxiety this time round has really spiralled, more so than from the first lockdown at the beginning of the pandemic,” said Priya Mitchell, counsellor at The British School Al Khubairat in Abu Dhabi.

“Some have got used to being at home don’t want to go back, while others are desperate to get back.

“We have seen an increase in depressive symptoms, especially with older pupils, and self-harm is starting younger.

“It is worrying and has taught us how important it is that we prioritise mental well-being.”

Ms Mitchell said she was liaising more with heads of year so they can support and offer advice to pupils if the demand is there.

The school will also carry out mental well-being checks so they can pick up on any behavioural patterns and put interventions in place to help pupils.

At Raha International School, the well-being team has provided parents with assessment surveys to see how they can support students at home to transition back to school.

“They have created a Well-being Resource Bank that parents have access to on information on various domains of mental health for students and families,” a team member said.

“Our pastoral team have been working with students to help ease the transition and reduce anxiety that [pupils] may experience after some have been nearly a year off campus.

"Special secondary tutorial classes have also focused on preparing students for their return; going over new guidelines, expectations and daily schedules.”

How Voiss turns words to speech

The device has a screen reader or software that monitors what happens on the screen

The screen reader sends the text to the speech synthesiser

This converts to audio whatever it receives from screen reader, so the person can hear what is happening on the screen

A VOISS computer costs between $200 and $250 depending on memory card capacity that ranges from 32GB to 128GB

The speech synthesisers VOISS develops are free

Subsequent computer versions will include improvements such as wireless keyboards

Arabic voice in affordable talking computer to be added next year to English, Portuguese, and Spanish synthesiser

Partnerships planned during Expo 2020 Dubai to add more languages

At least 2.2 billion people globally have a vision impairment or blindness

More than 90 per cent live in developing countries

The Long-term aim of VOISS to reach the technology to people in poor countries with workshops that teach them to build their own device

You may remember …

Robbie Keane (Atletico de Kolkata) The Irish striker is, along with his former Spurs teammate Dimitar Berbatov, the headline figure in this season’s ISL, having joined defending champions ATK. His grand entrance after arrival from Major League Soccer in the US will be delayed by three games, though, due to a knee injury.

Dimitar Berbatov (Kerala Blasters) Word has it that Rene Meulensteen, the Kerala manager, plans to deploy his Bulgarian star in central midfield. The idea of Berbatov as an all-action, box-to-box midfielder, might jar with Spurs and Manchester United supporters, who more likely recall an always-languid, often-lazy striker.

Wes Brown (Kerala Blasters) Revived his playing career last season to help out at Blackburn Rovers, where he was also a coach. Since then, the 23-cap England centre back, who is now 38, has been reunited with the former Manchester United assistant coach Meulensteen, after signing for Kerala.

Andre Bikey (Jamshedpur) The Cameroonian defender is onto the 17th club of a career has taken him to Spain, Portugal, Russia, the UK, Greece, and now India. He is still only 32, so there is plenty of time to add to that tally, too. Scored goals against Liverpool and Chelsea during his time with Reading in England.

Emiliano Alfaro (Pune City) The Uruguayan striker has played for Liverpool – the Montevideo one, rather than the better-known side in England – and Lazio in Italy. He was prolific for a season at Al Wasl in the Arabian Gulf League in 2012/13. He returned for one season with Fujairah, whom he left to join Pune.

The%20Emperor%20and%20the%20Elephant
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EAuthor%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ESam%20Ottewill-Soulsby%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EPublisher%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EPrinceton%20University%20Press%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EPages%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E392%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EAvailable%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EJuly%2011%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
TRAP

Starring: Josh Hartnett, Saleka Shyamalan, Ariel Donaghue

Director: M Night Shyamalan

Rating: 3/5

THE DEALS

Hamilton $60m x 2 = $120m

Vettel $45m x 2 = $90m

Ricciardo $35m x 2 = $70m

Verstappen $55m x 3 = $165m

Leclerc $20m x 2 = $40m

TOTAL $485m

The Great Derangement: Climate Change and the Unthinkable
Amitav Ghosh, University of Chicago Press

The specs: 2018 Maxus T60

Price, base / as tested: Dh48,000

Engine: 2.4-litre four-cylinder

Power: 136hp @ 1,600rpm

Torque: 360Nm @ 1,600 rpm

Transmission: Five-speed manual

Fuel consumption, combined: 9.1L / 100km

WEST ASIA RUGBY 2017/18 SEASON ROLL OF HONOUR

Western Clubs Champions League
Winners: Abu Dhabi Harlequins
Runners up: Bahrain

Dubai Rugby Sevens
Winners: Dubai Exiles
Runners up: Jebel Ali Dragons

West Asia Premiership
Winners: Jebel Ali Dragons
Runners up: Abu Dhabi Harlequins

UAE Premiership Cup
Winners: Abu Dhabi Harlequins
Runners up: Dubai Exiles

UAE Premiership
Winners: Dubai Exiles
Runners up: Abu Dhabi Harlequins

MATCH INFO

What: 2006 World Cup quarter-final
When: July 1
Where: Gelsenkirchen Stadium, Gelsenkirchen, Germany

Result:
England 0 Portugal 0
(Portugal win 3-1 on penalties)

RESULTS

2pm: Handicap (PA) Dh 40,000 (Dirt) 1,200m
Winner: AF Senad, Nathan Crosse (jockey), Kareem Ramadan (trainer)

2.30pm: Maiden (PA) Dh 40,000 (D) 1,000m
Winner: Ashjaan, Fabrice Veron, Eric Lemartinel.

3pm: Maiden (PA) Dh 40,000 (D) 1,700m
Winner: Amirah, Conner Beasley, Ali Rashid Al Raihe.

3.30pm: Handicap (PA) Dh 40,000 (D) 1,700m
Winner: Jap Al Yaasoob, Szczepan Mazur, Irfan Ellahi.

4pm: Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan Cup Prestige Handicap (PA) Dh 100,000 (D) 1,200m
Winner: Jawaal, Fernando Jara, Majed Al Jahouri.

4.30pm: Handicap (TB) Dh 40,000 (D) 1,200m
Winner: Manhunter, Ryan Curatolo, Mujeeb Rahman.

MATCH INFO

Real Madrid 2 (Benzema 13', Kroos 28')
Barcelona 1 (Mingueza 60')

Red card: Casemiro (Real Madrid)