Latest news with #i-Phone


Hindustan Times
23-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Hindustan Times
Inheritance review: A superb Phoebe Dynevor anchors globetrotting espionage thriller
From the opening moments of Inheritance, the new film from Neil Burger, there's an immediate sense of connect with this unnamed twenty-something protagonist (played by Phoebe Dynevor) who has an aimless night, filled with booze and emotionless sex. The camera follows her through and through, as she coils up some deep melancholy the viewer is not aware of yet. We will come to know that she is Maya, who is mourning the death of her terminally ill mother after taking care of her for the last eight months, unable to see what lies ahead of her now. Soon, Maya comes in touch with her estranged father Sam (Rhys Ifans), who offers her to join his real estate business which has its headquarters in Egypt. There's something about the enterprise that does not quite look okay, but Maya is more than eager to leave her home and get a change- her self-destructive instinct poses a threat that will soon change her entire life when her father gets kidnapped. He was not a real estate fixer as he proclaimed for her to believe that easily, but a spy. Danger awaits her, and without any training whatsoever, she has no other way to go than get to the truth. This globe-trotting thriller has the immediacy thanks to the guerrilla approach used in filming with an i-Phone by cinematographer Jackson Hunt with a minimal crew. Inheritance boasts of a heightened sense of authenticity and unpredictability. The chaotic lanes of Delhi are just as raw and unpolished here as in real life- a gritty realism that is a welcome change from the multiple polished spy thrillers that are produced every year in abundance. The main issue here arrives from the scripting stage, written by Burger and Olen Stienhaur, which begs for more intrigue. The familiar narrative beats do not sync well with the tightly controlled pace of the film, as the revelations follow. Special mention for Paul Leonard-Morgan's kinetic score which adds a lot of energy and soul to the proceedings. At the centre of this globe-trotting actioner lies the committed performance of Phoebe Dynevor, who appears in almost every scene in the film. The Bridgerton star gives an immensely controlled and grounded turn as Maya, wholly believable as a young woman whose initial recklessness gives way for a more steely reserve along the way. Her gradual shift might be a tad too predictable as the mission runs along, but the actor is able to provide a rich interiority to her presence that elevates the film overall.


Gulf Today
04-04-2025
- Business
- Gulf Today
Trump tariffs could see an iPhone cost nearly Dhs8,500
The Trump tariffs are creating an unprecedented rumble in the financial world of nations. Already there is talk of recession, inflation and sweeping job losses. A recent analysis by the Yale Budget Lab says that tariffs could cost the average American household an additional $1,600 to $2,000 a year, according to a report in the American media. Friends and foes alike of America are on the same page when they talk of slapping countermeasures. Britain has already chalked out a mammoth, over 400-page list of American goods they plan to tax, that includes guitars and jeans. Which means certain things that are dear to many people are not going to be near them anymore. Target CEO Brian Cornell told CNBC that consumers could see imminent price increases on produce items such as strawberries and avocados. The US tariffs would amount to the highest trade barriers in more than a century: a 10% baseline tariff on all imports and higher targeted duties on dozens of countries. That could jack up the price for US shoppers of everything from running shoes to Apple's iPhone. Apple what? Yes, sir, you heard right. The iPhone, a leading status symbol worldwide and a must-have accessory for millions, nay billions, across the globe. Now an i-Phone could cost nearly $2,300 if Apple passes the costs on to consumers, based on projections from Rosenblatt Securities, a New York-based institutional brokerage firm. That means a whopping Dhs8,447! Now, who would want that? Why would the average professional, particularly the budget-conscious, fork out over Dhs8,000 dirhams for a device that other companies could price far less unless he is a self-confessed gadget geek? Will it be, forever, as the song goes, 'Bye bye happiness, Hello loneliness, I think I'm gonna cry?' Your guess is as good as mine.