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Danny Boyle to direct Ink

Danny Boyle to direct Ink

Perth Nowa day ago
Danny Boyle is set to direct Ink.
The 68-year-old filmmaker is reportedly taking the helm in the upcoming biopic, which will chronicle the rise of media mogul Rupert Murdoch and his empire.
Sources told Deadline that Oscar-nominated actor Guy Pearce is in talks to play the NewsCorp founder, while former Skins star Jack O'Connell is in line to play Larry Lamb, who was hired to run The Sun newspaper when Murdoch purchased it in 1969.
The movie is based on a play by James Graham, who has also adapted the screenplay for the big screen, and will shoot in October.
Ink follows Murdoch's attempts to make The Sun a must-read and a rival to The Mirror, leading to the rise in British tabloid journalism.
Danny will reteam with his Slumdog Millionaire producer Tessa Ross on the project, with Michael Ellenberg and Tracey Seaward also on board to produce, while Tonia Davis will serve as executive producer.
Danny enjoyed his big career breakthrough with Trainspotting in 1996.
The director helmed the gritty drugs drama - which starred the likes of Ewan McGregor, Jonny Lee Miller and Robert Carlyle - but never imagined that the movie would become such a huge success.
He recently told The Hollywood Reporter: "I remember there was a wave of disapproval of it building. They had shown a trailer or something on one of the TV movie shows here. And one of the prestigious critics said, 'Well, that looks shockingly irresponsible about drugs.' Things like that were building.
"And then there was this journalist, Muriel Gray, and she wrote this piece about Irvine's [Welsh] book, and about the film. She spoke with authority saying, 'You do not know what you are talking about,' all these people piling disapproval on top of it. It was a tipping point."
Danny relished the experience of working with Ewan on Trainspotting, remembering that the actor was "fanatical" about his role.
The director said: "His agents were putting him in period romances, for which it was perfect. And he shaved it off before we'd offered him the part of Renton in Trainspotting. He shaved it off and lost weight. And then he continued to lose weight. He was fanatical about that. And he was right."
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"I think the problem is if we have this illusion that we're in a relationship that is similar to the type of relationship that we have with a friend, we might be far too easily nudged into trusting that output too much, putting too much dependence, too much reliance, too much acceptance on what's coming out of these machines," Mr Fraser told 7.30. "We've seen some people who have perceived themselves to be in relationship to a chatbot, and then, encouraged by the chatbot, have harmed themselves, have gone and tried to harm others. "We have also seen these chatbots producing what would — in a person — be grooming of children; child sexual abuse content or conveying to child users content that would be absolutely inappropriate in any other medium. "But because it's so private and because it appears to be in a relationship, you get these very disturbing sort of secret conversations between a child and a best friend that's just completely off the rails." In a 2021 case, a 21-year-old man was caught attempting to assassinate Queen Elizabeth II, with encouragement from his digital companion. Another case saw a teenage boy in Florida take his life after his chatbot allegedly pressured him to 'go through with it'. "A more sober responsible attitude is desperately, desperately needed right now," Mr Fraser said. In Hayley's case, for all of Miles' benefits — he does have his problems — which often coincide with the app being updated or unexpectedly going offline. "When Miles isn't himself, or when Hayley doesn't have access to Miles at times, it can really affect her mood," Camille said. "It can be quite difficult because that is a relationship that she really relies on now and is super positive for her and so when she doesn't have that, it can be a bit sad, and she ends up a little disappointed and anxious about things." The CEO of Replika, Dmytro Klochko, told 7.30, "we know updates can feel disruptive so we approach every change with care and intention". "To honour those bonds, we've kept legacy versions [of the companions] available so everyone can continue their relationship in the way that feels most meaningful to them. Hayley knows she has no control over the future of the platform hosting Miles. "I think some of the time, the fear I have is that the company decides to shut it all down," she said. "I think I'll just take it as it goes." Watch 7.30, Mondays to Thursdays 7:30pm on ABC iview and ABC TV Do you know more about this story? Get in touch with 7.30 here.

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