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Stars turn out for Valentino's funeral in Rome
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Israeli Bedouin say hope for better life crushed after deadly crackdown
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Russia demands Ukraine's Donbas region ahead of Abu Dhabi talks
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Iran lambasts Zelensky after Davos 'bully' warning
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Gauff hopes to copy 'insane' Osaka fashion statement, but not yet
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Australian Open to start earlier Saturday over forecast 40C heat
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Vietnam's To Lam 'unanimously' re-elected party chief
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Teenager Jovic dumps seventh seed Paolini out of Australian Open
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'He must hate me': Medvedev renews Tien rivalry at Australian Open
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'Navalny' director hits right notes in Sundance fiction debut
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Putintseva sings rabbit song to shut out 'disrespectful' fans
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Gauff fights back after wobble to reach Australian Open last 16
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Ryan backs La Rochelle 'to get over hump' of Champions Cup exit
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Vinicius revival can help Arbeloa's Real Madrid lift-off
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Schnitzel-fuelled Kane has Bayern hungry for history
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Trump says US 'armada' headed toward Gulf
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Alcaraz eases into Melbourne last 16 as Sabalenka 'all over the place'
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Welsford storms to Tour Down Under stage as Vine holds GC lead
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Rising star Mboko relishes another 'really cool' first against Sabalenka
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Alcaraz celebrates 100th Slam match with easy win at Australian Open
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'Five sets again': Gutsy Medvedev battles into Melbourne last 16
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Sixers down Rockets behind Embiid triple-double
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Japan PM Takaichi dissolves parliament for snap election
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T20 cricket World Cup row overshadows India's Olympic ambitions
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Trump's MAGA movement ramps up attacks on 'progressive white women'
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Pakistan battles legions of fake doctors
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Sabalenka digs deep as Alcaraz sets sights on Melbourne last 16
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Asian stocks extend gains but US concerns hit dollar, boost gold
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Emotional Sabalenka comes through test to make last 16 at Australian Open
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Rescuers dig for six missing in New Zealand landslide
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Chile police arrest fourth suspect in deadly wildfires
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Japan punk rock lawyer leads climate justice fight
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Rodman inks record-setting contract with NWSL'S Spirit
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TikTok establishes joint venture to end US ban threat
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Dodgers' latest splurge reignites baseball salary cap debate
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Iran warns 'finger on trigger' as Trump says Tehran wants talks
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'Basic tennis etiquette' - Navratilova, Davenport condemn Osaka
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Fuming Kyrgios 'does not know' what comes after Australian Open
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Arsenal face Man Utd test as City search for spark
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'Vigilant' Europe eyes next Trump shock after Greenland climbdown
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Workers dig for the missing in New Zealand landslide
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Scheffler tied for second behind Lee, Coody in La Quinta
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Patriots vie for Super Bowl return against Broncos
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Arctic blast to wallop N. America -- is climate change to blame?
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NYC sues to block Dr. Phil-fronted police TV show
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Intel shares plunge on earnings expectations
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White House X account alters protester photo to add tears
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US negotiators meet Putin for high-stakes Ukraine talks
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US stocks rally again after Trump backs off Greenland tariff threat
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Ecuador, Colombia ramp up trade war with tit-for-tat energy levies
'Navalny' director hits right notes in Sundance fiction debut
Academy Award-winning documentary director Daniel Roher was back at Sundance on Thursday for the film festival's opening day, showcasing a sharp turn in his work.
Roher, whose "Navalny" scooped Best Documentary Oscar for its poignant telling of the life of late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, shifted gears into fiction for "Tuner," starring Dustin Hoffman and Leo Woodall.
Part odd-couple, part heartbreaking romance and part thriller, "Tuner" was the answer to the question: "Now what?" after Roher scooped Hollywood's biggest prize in 2023, the director said.
"I was 29 and I was sitting there thinking to myself: 'What... do I do now?" Roher told an audience in Park City, Utah.
"I actually fell into this little rut... I didn't feel like making anything. I was really scared and overwhelmed by the magnitude of the moment and everything."
A chance encounter with a piano tuner -- the husband of his wife's friend -- set him wondering what this previously unconsidered profession was all about.
"He was like, 'it's about atrophy and entropy and the forces of the universe'," he said. "'They want to pull these strings out of tune, and it's my job to keep them in tune so people can play'."
"And I was like: let me write this down."
Hoffman -- in stunning form as the eccentric owner of a piano tuning business who refuses to wear his hearing aids -- plays mentor and father figure to Woodall's Nikki, a talented former pianist who had to stop playing because his oversensitive hearing makes any kind of loud noise impossible.
Alone on a tuning job one evening in a wealthy house, Nikki meets a gang of thieves who discover his incredible hearing means he can crack safes.
What starts out as a side-earner quickly degenerates, and Nikki is thrust into dangerous situations that jeopardise his burgeoning relationship with a gifted composition student, played by Havana Rose Liu.
Roher said the process of making a feature film had been fascinating, not least because after years in documentary, he was suddenly working with actors.
"Everything they do is just bizarre, but interesting and fascinating," he said. "I have tremendous respect for them, for their abilities, for the way that they operate. But I don't understand it."
Working with a veteran like Hoffman, whom he called a "legend" of the screen, however, helped put him at ease.
"He treated me like it was 1968, I was Mike Nichols, and we were shooting (Hoffman's breakout film) 'The Graduate'.
"He called me sir. He called me boss. And he just loved being there."
- Rescue -
Elsewhere at Sundance on Thursday, filmgoers got their first look at "Hanging By A Wire."
Director Mohammed Ali Naqvi's pacey documentary tells the real life story of the rescue of Pakistani schoolboys stranded hundreds of feet above a Himalayan valley in a rusting cable car when wires snap.
Told largely through footage filmed by the hundreds of terrified villagers who gathered below, the film showcases how the ubiquity of the cellphone and connections to social media affect the way that events unfold.
It is through grainy online footage that a local journalist first becomes aware of the drama. Her report, boosted by stunning drone footage provided by a local amateur, alerts the international media and galvanises a rescue response.
The military, police, a local zipline entrepreneur and a have-a-go hero are all involved in the pulse-racing rescue.
For Naqvi, the pacing and feel of the film needed to be as urgent and driving as if it were fiction.
"I love action thriller films from the '80s and 90s, and those are some of the films that have inspired us to make this," Naqvi told a Sundance audience.
Other highlights of the opening day included debut director Louis Paxton's dark comedy "The Incomer," which is infused with Scottish folklore.
Domhnall Gleeson ("Harry Potter") plays the man from the council sent to evict oddball islanders, Isla and Sandy (Gayle Rankin and Grant O'Rourke).
Inevitably, he is sucked in to the weird island life, in a film that explores loneliness and fitting in.
Sundance runs until February 1.
R.Buehler--VB