Canada's first Indigenous zombie film garnering international attention

lundi 31 octobre 2016

A film about a zombie apocalypse on a fly-in First Nation reserve is garnering international attention. 

The short film "REZilience" is currently playing at festival in four different countries and will be screening in Hollywood this November at the  LA Skins Fest and the American Indian Institute Film Festival.

"We're touching on a whole slew of issues affecting First Nations, Inuit, and Metis people across this country through the lens of the zombie genre," said Jayson Stewart, a high school teacher from Espanola, Ont. who wrote and directed the film.

"Four characters have to work together and use their sense of identity to survive," he said, adding the film touches on everything from residential schools to the sixties' scoop.

Zombies and Indigenous culture

There are many similarities that can be drawn between zombie flicks and current issues facing Indigenous communities, Stewart said.

"Zombies are symbolic of how society is just moving along and steam-rolling over Indigenous culture. It takes a select few to stand up and say. 'no more'."

While Stewart isn't Indigenous, he says many of his family members are Cree, and a majority of the students he teaches at Espanola High School in northern Ontario are Anishnabek.

The majority of the zombies in the film are members of nearby Sagamok First Nation, where most of the footage was shot this summer.

"It's important to have partnerships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities, especially when you can use art to pass along those messages," he said.

Stewart said if he can get the financial backing, he hopes to film a full-length feature next summer.

indigenous zombie

The film REZilience features members of Sagamok First Nation in northern Ontario. (Provided)

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Canada's first Indigenous zombie film garnering international attention

HBO's Mogadishu, Minnesota thrusts Minneapolis Somalis into unwanted spotlight

Mogadishu, Minnesota, an HBO television drama created by an Oscar-winning director and a Canadian-Somali rapper, has infuriated many in Minnesota's Somali community who say the show will perpetuate unfair stereotypes of Muslims.

Touted as a window into the lives of Somalis in Minneapolis adjusting to life in the U.S. Midwestern city, many community members instead fear Mogadishu, Minnesota will stoke Islamophobia if it airs. Filming on the pilot episode was scheduled to end last week.
 
At a time when opposition to immigrants and anti-Muslim sentiment have featured heavily in rhetoric by Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, Minnesota's Somali community members, especially men, are worried the possible TV drama will brand them as potential terrorists.

'As Muslims, as blacks and as refugees, people have their misconceptions about us already.' - Mahmoud Mire

"I'm completely against it," Mahmoud Mire, 20, a first-generation Somali-American, said of the show. "As Muslims, 
as blacks and as refugees, people have their misconceptions about us already."
 
Those feelings have been echoed by others in protests against the show. Somali residents in one Minneapolis housing complex voted earlier this month to block crews from filming in their building.
 
Even the involvement of Somalia's best-known celebrity, Canadian-Somali rapper K'naan Warsame, as writer, director and executive director has not quelled mistrust. He is working with executive producer Kathryn Bigelow, who won an Oscar as best director in 2010 for The Hurt Locker.
 
HBO officials declined to discuss the issues around the pilot other than to confirm the cast and provide a short synopsis, describing it as "a family drama that grapples with what it means to be American — among the Somalis of 
Minneapolis."
 
The filming of a pilot does not ensure it will air or be made into a full series.


 
Somalis began to arrive in Minnesota's Twin Cities in the late 1980s and early 1990s, fleeing a civil war in their Horn of Africa nation. There are around 39,000 living in the state of 5.5 million people, according to U.S. census data from 2014. That is up from around 32,000 in 2010.
 
Somali-Americans are particularly sensitive about how they are perceived after a trial earlier this year at which three young men from the community were convicted of trying to join Islamic State. Six others pleaded guilty to supporting the militant group in a case that some in the community denounced as an example of government entrapment.
 
Then last month a 20-year-old Somali-American stabbed 10 people at a shopping mall in St. Cloud, Minn., before being fatally shot by an off-duty police officer. An Islamic State-linked media outlet described the attacker as a "soldier" of the group.
 
"Anything that happens with Somalis, our community is thrown under the bus," said Mubashir Jeilani, 21, a Somali-American from Minneapolis. He is executive director at the West Bank Community Coalition (WBCC) in the city's Cedar-Riverside neighbourhood, the hub for the area's Somali community.

'Great distrust'

Oscar Nominations

The community distrusts Hollywood, which has largely portrayed Somalis only in a negative light, typically as terrorists or pirates in films such as 2013's Captain Phillips. (Sony/Columbia Pictures/AP)

In the current environment, many Somali-Americans in Minnesota are leery of Hollywood storytellers.
 
"There is a great distrust between this community and the directors and producers in Hollywood," said Jaylani Hussein, 34, who immigrated to Minneapolis from Somalia in the early 1990s when he was around 10 years old. He is now executive director of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, an advocacy group.
 
Hussein decries movies such as Captain Phillips in 2013, which dramatizes an attack by Somali pirates on a U.S.-flagged cargo ship, and Ridley Scott's 2001 film Black Hawk Down about a failed U.S. military mission in Mogadishu, for their portrayals of Somalis as pirates or terrorists.
 
"There are real consequences in the stories we tell," he said.

Early concerns

The backlash to Mogadishu, Minnesota started last year after early reports on the show, which the Hollywood Reporter said in December 2015 was titled The Recruiters.
 
The trade publication, quoting an unnamed source, described how the drama would "draw open an iron curtain behind which viewers will see the highly impenetrable world of Jihadi recruitment."
 
The filming of the pilot is expected to have employed some 350 people and to have generated roughly $4 million US in spending for the local economy, Minnesota officials said. But that failed to impress many in the local community.
 
In September, protesters objecting to the show interrupted a K'naan concert in Minneapolis and clashed with police.
 
K'naan has met several times with community members and local organizations to address their concerns. The WBCC's Jeilani said K'naan assured him the show would portray the community as more than just a "hub for recruitment."

MINNESOTA-HBO/

Oscar-winning director and producer Kathryn Bigelow, seen in Hollywood in 2012, is 'notoriously known for being successful by projecting a very negative view of Muslims,' said Jaylani Hussein of the Minnesota chapter of advocacy group Council on American-Islamic Relations. (Mario Anzuoni/Reuters)


 
K'naan could not be reached for comment. Last month he told a Somali journalist that the project was "pretty historic," and that he had hired Somalis to work on the production in an effort to train a new generation of filmmakers.
 
While a local Somali city councilman has publicly backed the TV show, others say they remain skeptical due in part to Bigelow's involvement, which brought considerable buzz in Hollywood.
 
"Kathryn Bigelow is notoriously known for being successful by projecting a very negative view of Muslims," said CAIR's Hussein.
 
Bigelow's most successful films have centered on U.S. military operations in Muslim countries. Zero Dark Thirty in 2012 was about the hunt for Osama Bin Laden, while The Hurt Locker depicted a bomb disposal team in Iraq. Bigelow's agent could not be reached for comment. 

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Bill Cosby wants accusers to take competency, memory tests

Bill Cosby's lawyers accuse prosecutors of trying to use the "tainted, unreliable memories of women, now in their senior years" to build their sexual assault case against him and will seek competency hearings on any accusers allowed to testify.

On the eve of a key pretrial hearing Tuesday, they said the women's memories have been marred by time, media coverage of the case and their friendship with one another. After a memory expert reviewed the women's statements for the defence, the lawyers dismiss the other accounts as "stories of that night spent partying with a famous celebrity."

The two sides will face off in court to determine what evidence can be used at the entertainer's scheduled felony trial in June.

Cosby, now 79 and blind, is charged with drugging and molesting a former Temple University employee in 2004. He has pleaded not guilty and argues that he can't defend himself against vague accusations that stretch back to the 1960s.

Prosecutors hope to have 13 of about 60 known accusers testify to show a pattern of "prior bad acts." Courts can allow the testimony if it shows a very specific "signature" crime pattern.

A question of consent

However, the defence said the accounts range from rape to other sex acts to fondling. And they said some of the women took drugs or alcohol knowingly, while others say they did not.

Prosecutors argue that the drinks, even if taken knowingly, were also laced with drugs that knocked the women out and left them unable to give consent.

Some of the accusers don't even know what year they met Cosby, defence lawyers Brian McMonagle and Angela Agrusa wrote in their filing Monday. Cosby's memory is also fading, they said, to the point he could not answer 90 questions in a civil deposition last year.

At least four of the women "did not realize that they were victims until they heard the accusations of other women in the media," according to Dr. Elizabeth Loftus, the defence psychologist who studies human memory. Her preliminary findings were excerpted in the brief.

Cosby used power, fame, says prosecutors 

Prosecutors in suburban Philadelphia say Cosby routinely used his fame and power to befriend impressionable young women, knocked them out with drugs or alcohol and then sexually assaulted them.

The testimony of the 13 others — should Montgomery County Judge Steven T. O'Neill allow some or all of it — could bolster a case that turns on the question of consent. Cosby, in a decade-old deposition, acknowledged some of the encounters but said they were consensual.

The allegations

The Associated Press does not typically name people who say they are sexual assault victims. However, trial accuser Andrea Constand has given consent through her lawyer, while 10 other women named below have spoken out publicly. One has spoken out under a pseudonym, while the other two remain anonymous. The accounts below, listed chronologically, note ages for each woman and Cosby at the time, as described in a prosecution memo filed last month.

———

Andrea Constand

Andrea Constand

Andrea Constand, who accuses Bill Cosby of sexually assaulting her, walks in a park in Toronto, Dec. 30, 2015. (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

Ages then: She was 30; he was 66.

Constand told police in 2005 that Cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her a year earlier at his suburban Philadelphia estate. Constand, a Temple University basketball team manager, said he gave her three unlabeled blue pills to "relax" as she discussed a career change with him. She said she was semi-conscious on his couch when he digitally penetrated her. Cosby, a high-profile Temple booster and trustee, is charged with sexually assaulting a person unable to give consent — a felony that could bring 10 years in prison. He has pleaded not guilty and remains free on $1 million bail.

———

Jane Doe 1

Ages then: She was 21; he was 30.

She was a flight attendant when she met Cosby in about 1964. He invited her to a taping of his show and cast her as an extra. After being friends for several months, she said, he offered her Champagne at the Drake Hotel in Chicago, which left her unable to ward off his sexual advances before she passed out.

———

Linda Brown

Ages then: She was 21; he was 31.

Brown's agent sent the aspiring model to attend Cosby's show in Toronto and have dinner with him afterward in 1969. He invited her to his hotel room to give her a gift, and offered her a soda that caused her to black out, she said, before raping her.

———

Cindra Ladd

Ages then: She was 21; he was 31.

Ladd, a model, met Cosby in 1969 when he offered career advice. They were at his friend's house in New York one day when she complained about having a headache and he gave her a pill he called "a miracle cure" from his doctor. She became incapacitated, and Cosby raped her, she said.

———

Jane Doe 2

Ages then: She was in her early 20s; he was 32.

She met Cosby through her job at the Playboy Club in New York in the early 1970s. He offered her quaaludes in a limousine one day, which she said she declined. She then had three or four glasses of Champagne but believes they contained an intoxicant that left her unconscious. She woke up naked in a hotel room feeling sore and said she had been sexually assaulted.

———

Donna Motsinger 

Ages then: She was 26; he was 33.

Motsinger was a waitress at the Trident restaurant in Sausalito, California, a favorite of Cosby's. He befriended Motsinger and her 9-year-old son. In 1972, Motsinger said, she accepted an invitation to Cosby's show and drank wine he gave her in the limousine on the way there. When a headache ensued, she took a pill he handed her. She recalls being fondled before waking up the next day, nearly naked, at her own home.

———

Margie Shapiro 

Ages then: She was 19; he was 37.

Shapiro worked at Castle Donuts in Santa Monica, Calif., in 1975 when Cosby stopped by. He invited her to the set of Mother, Jugs & Speed and then to a dinner party, but instead took her to a house near the Playboy Mansion, where they played pinball fueled by Cosby's challenge that whoever lost would have to take a pill she believed to be a quaalude. She lost. She recalls waking up to find Cosby having sex with her.

———

Therese Serignese

 Therese Serignese

Therese Serignese discusses her experience with comedian Bill Cosby at her home on Thursday, Nov. 20, 2014, in Boca Raton, Fla. Serignese said the television icon raped her in 1976 when she was 19 years old following a show in Las Vegas. (J Pat Carter/AP Photo)

Ages then: She was 18 or 19; he was 38 or 39.

Serignese, now a nurse, was in the gift shop of the Las Vegas Hilton in about 1975 when she met Cosby. He later invited her to his show, and to a room backstage afterward, where he gave her two pills that left her incapacitated before he raped her, she said. Cosby, in a 2006 deposition in Constand's lawsuit, testified that he gave Serignese quaaludes before what he called a consensual sexual encounter.

———

Linda Kirkpatrick

Ages then: She was 25; he was 43.

Kirkpatrick met Cosby while playing against him in a tennis tournament in 1981. He offered her tickets to his show at the Las Vegas Hilton, where he gave her a drink in his dressing room that left her incapacitated, she said. She next recalls him being on top of her, kissing her and rubbing against her.

———

Janice Baker-Kinney

Ages then: She was 23 or 24; he was 45.

Baker-Kinney, then a Harrah's bartender in Reno, went to a pizza party at a nearby home where Cosby was staying in 1982. He insisted she take two pills, she said, before the backgammon game they were playing went blurry. She recalls seeing her blouse unbuttoned and his pants unzipped before she awoke naked with signs she had been sexually assaulted.

———

Heidi Thomas

Heidi Thomas

Heidi Thomas says she was a 24-year-old actress when she met Cosby seeking career advice. (David Zalubowski/AP Photo)

Ages then: She was 24; he was 47.

Thomas' agent sent the aspiring actress to meet Cosby for career advice at a Harrah's hotel in Reno in 1984, but the limousine he sent instead took her to a private house where she said he gave her a drink so she could play the intoxicated person in a script he gave her. During intermittent bouts of consciousness, she recalls being naked and Cosby forcing her to perform oral sex.

———

Rebecca Neal

Ages then: She was about 28; he was 48.

Neal worked as a masseuse at a Las Vegas health club where Cosby played tennis in the mid-1980s. He befriended her mother and aunt there, leading Neal to accept an invitation to his show at the Las Vegas Hilton and dinner afterward. Cosby urged her to have a drink set before her while he ate. She said he later raped her in his room while she was too disoriented to give consent.

———

Lise-Lotte Lublin

Lise-Lotte Lublin

Attorney Gloria Allred, right, listens as Lise-Lotte Lublin testifies in a hearing at the Legislative Building, Friday, March 13, 2015, in Carson City, Nev. (Cathleen Allison/AP Photo)

Ages then: She was 23; he was 50.

Lublin was a 23-year-old aspiring actress when she met Cosby in 1989. She and her mother went for a run with Cosby, and he gave them show tickets before he invited her to the Elvis suite of the Las Vegas Hilton to practice acting improvisation. He prodded her to take two drinks to relax, which she ultimately did. She recalls seeing Cosby stroking her hair, and walking down a hall, before she woke up at home two days later. She believes she was sexually assaulted.

———

Kacey

Ages then: She was 29; he was 58.

The witness, who agreed to be photographed but not share her identity in the media, worked for one of Cosby's agents and had known the entertainer for six years when he invited her to lunch at his bungalow at the Bel Air Hotel in 1996 to discuss her acting ambitions. He was in a robe and slippers when she arrived, and offered her wine and a pill that she consumed after he reassured her it was safe. She then recalls being sexually assaulted by Cosby on his bed.

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'A broken bond': how Michael McCary's health led to split from Boyz II Men

Michael McCary's deep bass was a signature of the internationally successful R&B group Boyz II Men, but more than a decade after he officially left the Grammy-winning group, he's revealed why: he has multiple sclerosis. 

The singer, now 44, made the revelations on a weekend episode of Iyanala: Fix My Life on the Oprah Winfrey Network and revealed how his health struggles led to a strained relationship with his former bandmates.

During the 1990s, Boyz II Men's incredible harmonies, power ballads and groovy tracks (Motownphilly, End of the RoadI'll Make Love to You, Water Runs DryOne Sweet Day, On Bended Knee) dominated the charts and earned the quartet a raft of music awards.

According to McCary, he began having back spasms while performing in the group, which he had attributed to scoliosis.

APW2000110842364

In the 1990s, Boyz II Men topped the charts and were fixtures at award ceremonies, including at the 1995 American Music Awards in Los Angeles, where they won for favourite band and single in the soul-rhythm and blues category and favourite single in the pop-rock category. (Vince Bucci/AFP/Getty Images)

He never fully opened up about being diagnosed with the autoimmune disease to his bandmates Shawn Stockman and Nathan and Wayne Morris.  By the age of 22, however, McCary's symptoms had worsened dramatically and "started going full scale." 

He eventually left the band in 2003, after more than two decades performing together. Doctors told him aggravating a "locked" nerve in his back could potentially leave him paralyzed, according to McCary.

Though he has appeared with his former collaborators on occasion over the years, they continue to perform as Boyz II Men without him and the split was ultimately acrimonious.

"If I had to sum up what I got from my brothers in Boyz II Men, I would have to say betrayal, a broken bond," McCary said on the OWN program. "At this point, we don't even talk."

Last month, on another OWN program entitled Oprah: Where Are They Now?, Wanya Morris painted a different picture of the break-up.

"One of the problems was he had a back issue," Morris said referencing McCary's departure.

"It could have been fixed, instead he stopped coming to work and we had to move forward without him — and he wasn't happy about that."

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'A broken bond': how Michael McCary's health led to split from Boyz II Men

Manitoba renames highway after Life is a Highway singer Tom Cochrane

He's known for his hit song Life is a Highway, and now Tom Cochrane will have a highway named after him in his home province.

The Manitoba government is renaming a provincial road after the multiple Juno Award-winning rock musician and humanitarian, who hails from the northern town of Lynn Lake.

Premier Brian Pallister, Infrastructure Minister Blaine Pederson, Lynn Lake Mayor James Lindsay and Cochrane himself will be on hand for the announcement at 11 a.m. CT Monday at the Manitoba Legislature.

Cochrane, born in 1953 in Lynn Lake, has been performing since the 1970s, but he stepped into the limelight with his massively successful single Life is a Highway from his album Mad, Mad World, which was released 25 years ago.

His other hits have included Big League, Sinking Like a Sunset, Boy Inside the Man and I Wish You Well.

He has used his celebrity status for a number of humanitarian causes, including Elizabeth's Concerts of Hope (ALS) and World Vision.

Cochrane was presented with the key to the city of Winnipeg in June 2012, in part to recognize his efforts to raise money for ALS patient support and research. He was named to the Order of Manitoba last year and was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame in 1993, among other honours.

Most recently, Cochrane performed at the NHL Heritage Classic and alumni game at Investors Group Field on Oct. 22-23.

HKN Heritage Classic 20161022

Tom Cochrane performs during the first intermission as the Winnipeg Jets and Edmonton Oilers alumni teams face off at the NHL Heritage Classic in Winnipeg, Saturday, October 22, 2016. (Trevor Hagan/Canadian Press)

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Manitoba renames highway after Life is a Highway singer Tom Cochrane

Happy Diwali 2016, from these Hollywood stars

dimanche 30 octobre 2016

Quantico's Priyanka Chopra, Silver Linings Playbook Anupam Kher and Guardians of the Galaxy's Vin Diesel are among Hollywood's famous faces celebrating the Hindu festival, Diwali.

Chopra, who celebrated in New York with castmates from her ABC drama, posted a video on Instagram Saturday.

"May all your dreams come true and may you be blessed with love, luck and light," she wrote.

Diwali, also known as the Festival of Lights, is a holiday in India, Malaysia and Singapore, among other places. It is a spiritual celebration commemorating the victory of light over darkness and hope over despair. The spectacular event is marked by lights, lanterns, candles and fireworks in communities around the world.

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Devotees offer prayers in front of the illuminated Golden Temple in Amritsar, in India's northwestern state of Punjab. (Narinder Nanu/AFP/Getty Images)

Vin Diesel, who stars in the upcoming film XXX The Return Of Xander Cage alongside Deepika Padukone, joined the Indian actress in a Happy Diwali video that doubled as movie promotion.

Legendary Bollywood actor Amitabh Bachchan, who made his Hollywood debut at the age of 70 in the The Great Gatsby, paid tribute to "soldiers that sacrifice their lives" in a message posted on Twitter.

Another mainstay in both Bollywood and Hollywood, Anupam Kher, also shared a message to celebrate the festivities. He's best known for his roles in films like Bend it Like Beckham and Silver Linings Playbook.

It's customary before Diwali night for people to clean and decorate their homes and offices. At night, people dress up, light candles around their homes and offer prayers to the goddess of fertility and prosperity, Lakshmi.

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Tyler Perry's Madea spooks Tom Hanks' Inferno in box office upset

Tom Hanks. Tom Cruise. Ben Affleck. None of them have been a match for Tyler Perry's Madea.

In a surprise victory at the weekend box office, Perry's Boo! A Madea Halloween toppled another A-lister as Hanks' and Ron Howard's new Dan Brown adaptation, Inferno, went up in flames.

Perry's latest movie about his tough-talking grandmother remained number one for the second straight week with an estimated $16.7 million US.

Inferno bombs

That was enough to scare away the third installment of the Da Vinci Code franchise. According to studio estimates Sunday, Inferno bombed with $15 million, about half of what more bullish predictions anticipated.

Film Review Inferno

Tom Hanks and Felicity Jones appear in a scene from Inferno, which had a disappointing opening at the box office this weekend. (Jonathan Prime/Sony Pictures/The Associated Press)

Sony Pictures and Inferno could take solace in stronger overseas business. In three weeks of international release, the Italy-set film has earned nearly $150 million.

The studio also stressed that the $75 million budget for Inferno was half that of 2006's The Da Vinci Code or 2009's Angels & Demons.

"Certainly we thought of the film as for the international market. We knew that's where the sweet spot was going to be," said Rory Bruer, domestic distribution chief for Sony.

"We got a few bad breaks, the biggest being this historical World Series." - Rory Bruer, Sony Pictures

"We got a few bad breaks, the biggest being this historical World Series."

Friday night's Game Three between the Chicago Cubs and the Cleveland Indians drew 19.4 million viewers, a 12-year-best, and Saturday night's Game Four was watched by 15.1 million.

But the unexpectedly poor performance of Inferno was yet another example of an anxious trend in the movie business: More of the same isn't working.

Dan Brown craze over

Poorly reviewed and coming seven years after the last Robert Langdon thriller, Inferno arrived long after the Dan Brown craze.

Angels & Demons opened with $46.1 million in 2009. Efforts to adapt the third book in Brown's series, The Lost Symbol, were scuttled in favour of Brown's fourth installment, Inferno

Inferno joins the long list of sequels that didn't measure up to their predecessors this year and in particular this summer when only three of the 14 sequels released outperformed their immediate predecessors at the box office," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for comScore.

Hanks has still notched the fall's biggest hit, Clint Eastwood's Sully. It's been an especially star-studded season, with Tom Cruise in Jack Reacher: Never Go Back ($9.6 million in its second week) and Ben Affleck in The Accountant ($8.5 million in its third week).

Film Box Office

Tom Cruise appears in a scene from Jack Reacher: Never Go Back. (Chiabella James/Paramount Pictures/The Associated Press)

Perry hits mark

But Perry's long-running character has fared better than each, at least in North America.

The Halloween-themed Boo, released by Lionsgate, has made $52 million in 10 days, making it Perry's biggest hit since 2009's Madea Goes to Jail.

Next week's big North American opening, Marvel's Doctor Strange, opened in 33 territories abroad where it kicked things off with $86 million.

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Tyler Perry's Madea spooks Tom Hanks' Inferno in box office upset

Justin Bieber explains why he walked off stage in Manchester, then deletes tweet

Justin Bieber isn't exactly saying Sorry. 

But the Canadian superstar tried to explain in a letter posted to Twitter Saturday why he recently walked off stage during a concert in Manchester, England.

"People tend to want to shut you down. What I mean by that is...people try to twist things, some people don't want to listen," he wrote. 

"But I simply feel like, if I didn't use this platform to say how I truly feel, and if I didn't use this platform to be the man that I know I am, and speak from what's in my heart, then I'm doing myself injustice, and I'm not doing anybody in this audience any justice."

The letter has since been pulled down.

"There's times when I get upset...times when I get angry, there's times when I'm going to be frustrated. But I'm always going to be myself on this stage," Bieber continued.

Bieber deleted tweet

Bieber posted this open letter to fans on his Twitter account Saturday night. By Sunday morning, it had been pulled down. (Twitter)

The letter was posted following an incident Oct. 23 during the Manchester stop of his Purpose world tour.

The audience was left wondering Where R U Now when Bieber became visibly frustrated and left the stage after fans wouldn't stop screaming, despite his attempts to settle them. He returned a short time later.

"When people try to twist things and say 'Justin's angry at this fans. He doesn't want his fans to scream' That's not at all what I was doing," he wrote in the letter. "All I was simply doing was wanting people to listen."

The Cold Water singer has had a rocky relationship with his fans recently.

He called screams during a Birmingham, U.K., stop on his tour "obnoxious" and was heard on video telling fans in Oslo, Norway: "You guys suck." 

Over the summer, Bieber shut down his Instagram account for a period of time after engaging in a war of words with followers and ex-girlfriend Selena Gomez over photos he had posted posing with friend Sofia Richie.

Bieber threatens to make Instagram account private

Bieber posted a series of photos with 17-year-old Sofia Richie in May, then removed his Instagram account temporarily. He warned fans to 'stop the hate this is getting out of hand' after all the backlash about their rumoured relationship. (Instagram)

In May, he also told fans on Instagram that he no longer wanted to take photos with them because he felt "like a zoo animal."

But for all the shots he's taken at some fans, he's also scored points with others.

The 22-year-old was described as a "true gent" after joining a Manchester hockey club on the ice for a friendly game Oct. 25 in between tour performances.

 "The guys all treated him like a normal person, and I think he responded well to that," team captain Trevor Johnson noted on the organization's website after the visit.

Justin Bieber Manchester Storm

Justin Bieber, centre, poses with the Manchester Storm ice hockey club in England after the global superstar joined them on the ice Oct. 25. (ManchesterStorm.com)

In his latest Twitter note, Bieber admitted there are times when he says the wrong thing, "because I'm human."

"I don't say the right thing all the time because if that was the case, then I'd be a robot and I'm just, I'm not a robot," Bieber's Twitter note said.

He ended the letter by thanking the people who attended his performance in Glasgow, U.K., Saturday night for "listening" and "understanding."

"You guys are truly amazing."

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'Horror is an emotion': Why the genre will never die

Patricia Chica has been directing dramatic art-house films for more than a decade, but it wasn't until she got behind the lens for her first horror film three years ago, that she saw the genre's power.

"Since I started directing horror, I have tripled my fan base and they've been very loyal," said the Canadian filmmaker, who's based in Los Angeles. "They know every single aspect of the genre and they get very protective of the genre."

Director Patricia Chica

L.A.-based Canadian director Patricia Chica attributes the growth in popularity and success of horror films to higher quality filmmaking. (Flirt Films)

While horror has always had a strong niche audience, the genre has been seeing more widespread popularity in recent years.

High quality horror

So much so that the American television network AMC recently launched an all-horror streaming service in Canada, the U.S. and Britain, called Shudder.

"Something that's different in the moment is better quality horror from more mainstream avenues," says Sam Zimmerman, Shudder's curator and the former managing editor of the horror film fan magazine Fangoria.

Shows like The Walking Dead are a big part of the renaissance, he says. The smash hit zombie apocalyse series, now in its seventh season, is the highest rated show on television. It's heavily discussed online by devoted fans, particularly after its Oct. 23 season premiere, which nabbed over 20 million viewers anxious — and subsequently horrified — to find out who was killed off by the villain Negan.

The series American Horror Story and franchise films like Paranormal Activity and The Conjuring are also proving how viable the market is.The Conjuring 2, which centres around poltergeist spiritsgrossed $320 million US worldwide following its release in June. Its budget was a relatively modest $40 million.

Paranormal Activity, which includes six films, has been preying on fear for years and now it's heading into more otherworldly territory: virtual reality. A game based on the films and set for release this year is being dubbed as one of the most scary screen experiences to hit the gaming world.

paranormal-cp-7494734

Presented as if it were actual amateur video footage, the first Paranormal Activity chronicles a young couple's attempt to record evidence of the supernatural presence haunting their home. (Paramount Pictures/Associated Press)

'Fear of the known'

THEIR TOP HORROR PICKS:

Sam Zimmerman: American Werewolf in London (1981)

"You're scared. You're laughing. The creature is amazing."

Patricia Chica: Maniac (2012)

"The viewing experience was out of this world. I thought it was very well done and very intelligent."

"It's often said horror is an emotion," says Zimmerman. "You know it when you see it. Horror is the fear of the known. And horror has always had the privilege of reflecting our times."

Chica is convinced that's why the genre is reaching new heights now.

"We live in a society where we're constantly engaged in fear, especially now in politics," she said.

"People want to overcome their fears. It's very addictive and very compelling."

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'Horror is an emotion': Why the genre will never die

Hilary Duff, boyfriend spark outrage for culturally inappropriate Halloween costumes

Hilary Duff is getting an earful from social media after she and her boyfriend showed up to a Los Angeles Halloween party Friday in costumes not exactly kosher for this day and age.

The former Disney star was dressed up as a pants-less pilgrim while her new beau Jason Walsh, a personal trainer, wore a headdress and face paint, appearing to be an Indigenous chief.

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The couple was dressed for Halloween as a Native American chief and pilgrim. (Todd Williamson/Getty Images)

Duff posted a photo on Instagram referencing her costume before the Beverly Hills party. And even her followers found it tough to defend the look.

"How could you have possibly thought your couples costume was OK?" one user wrote. "I suggest you and your boyfriend crack a history book, beyond 'Thanksgiving for children.'"

As soon as the official party photos were released, social media lit up with comments — and they were less than favourable. People referred to the outfits as "blatant racism," "disrespectful" and insensitive.

Some tweets highlighted the current situation in North Dakota, in which a group of Native-Americans is protesting an oil pipeline they say threatens their water resources and land.

Earlier this week, actor Chris Hemsworth expressed his solidarity with the demonstrators in an Instagram post. He also apologized for sporting a sacred headdress to a costume party last year.

Duff has not responded to the backlash on social media.

There has been a push for years across Canada to remove similar costumes from the market. Many people, including Indigenous groups, argue they trivialize First Nations culture.

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