A long-awaited film on the life of anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela premiered in his native South Africa on Sunday, stirring emotional memories of the country's turbulent history.
The movie "Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom", largely based on his autobiography of the same title, traces the life of the anti-apartheid icon from his childhood in the rural Eastern Cape to his election as the country's first black president in 1994.

Written by Anthony Sargon
It's always tricky adapting a popular novel; taking any sort of creative liberty with the material can alienate the fan-base, but being too faithful to the source material can also push more casual viewers away. As a person who has never read the seminal "Ender's Game", I can say that the movie stood pretty well on its own, although there was definitely room for improvement.

This summer, out of the blue, playwright Glen Berger got a call from director Julie Taymor.
He assumed he was being butt-dialed.

Barely four years after he first appeared at the Paris fashion show, then aged just 19, Brazilian designer Pedro Lourenco has made a name for himself both at home and abroad.
Late last year, the U.S. Forbes magazine included him on its annual list of 30 under-30 young talents who made their mark in fashion, education, music, science and health, sports or technology.

Controversial Egyptian satirist Bassem Youssef's television channel suspended his program on Friday, a week after he returned from a four-month break and fired barbs at the country's military.
Youssef, known as "Egypt's Jon Stewart" after modelling his Al-Bernameg (The Program) on the US comedian's popular satirical news program, had already run foul of Islamist president Mohammed Morsi, who was ousted by the military in July.

Breaking through the bar-room chatter, a voice calls audience members downstairs, to the basement of Madrid's "Microtheatre".
Formerly a butcher's shop, this theater bar in a formerly undesirable neighborhood of the Spanish capital now uses its tiny underground chambers for a novel form of budget entertainment.

A U.S. student has agreed to plead guilty to hacking online accounts of Miss Teen USA and other women and threatening to publish nude photos of them, prosecutors said Thursday.
Jared James Abrahams surrendered in September to FBI agents probing so-called "sextortion" cases, in which he made demands in return for agreeing not to release the pictures.

More than 30 years after "Star Wars," Harrison Ford has returned to inter-stellar space battles in big-budget sci-fi spectacular "Ender's Game."
But the 71-year-old insists it's the human relations rather than hi-tech wizardry that drew him to the project, developed from a novel by Orson Scott Card and directed by South African "X-Men" director Gavin Hood.

Kim Kardashian and Kanye West are suing a co-founder of YouTube over a video of their marriage proposal that was posted online.
The lawsuit filed Thursday claims Chad Hurley violated a confidentiality agreement when he posted the fuzzy footage of the lavish proposal on his new web venture, MixBit.

One thing about season 13 of "American Idol" is that unlike last season, the judges seem to be getting along.
At an audition stop in Atlanta on Wednesday, Jennifer Lopez said she's excited for people to see how funny Harry Connick Jr. is and how much he knows about music.
