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...think that they do want the population to be more creative and self-expressive. That's basically it. UEKRONGTHAM: Part of that relaxation could also be economically driven, because the government has expressly said that it wants to increase the GDP from the media sector by a certain percentage, and part of that is that they need to be seen as allowing freedom and creativity. TAN: Yeah, Singapore is quite uptight in some senses. But I think the government is realizing that. Education has a lot to do with that as well - the kids of this generation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Singapore Redux | 5/15/2008 | See Source »

...into the industry is easier, isn't it? KHOO: Because of technology, everything has changed. Anyone can be a filmmaker. All of our last three films were shot in high-definition video. It allows you to have more creative freedom. Some filmmakers would say you have to spend a certain amount of money in order for a film to go to a certain film festival. I disagree with that. It's really the conceptualization of an idea and how you execute that idea. You can do a film for $60,000 and still go and run that extra mile...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Singapore Redux | 5/15/2008 | See Source »

...relief effort, including 50,000 Chinese soldiers, was under way, but the devastation from the powerful quake, which rocked skyscrapers in cities as far away as Bangkok and Taipei, was vast. Two days after the first shock, the official death toll had risen to almost 15,000 - and was certain to soar. Whatever the final toll, the Wenchuan earthquake, named for the Sichuan county at the epicenter, will likely be China's worst natural disaster since a quake erupted under the northeastern town of Tangshan in 1976, killing an estimated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Walls Tumble Down | 5/15/2008 | See Source »

...junta's disaster response could lead to a coup by younger, reformist officers. One source at the Rangoon airport described how rank-and-file soldiers were exhausted from unloading relief supplies. Officers, he says, are angry at the lack of planning by their superiors. But it's far from certain whether such frustration will turn into a groundswell against the junta. Similar hopes of reform surfaced during pro-democracy demonstrations last September, only to be dashed when soldiers gunned down dozens of innocent protestors. Thousands of monks, who had led the peaceful rallies, were arrested. Hundreds of political activists remain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Saving Burma | 5/15/2008 | See Source »

...ripping yarn with a feline Messiah. The theological touches in the Lewis and Pullman books are things for adults to ponder--and, when the movie versions come out, to praise or protest. Remember when that pagan fable about Harry Potter appeared as a film? An anguished cry rose from certain Christian groups, but that didn't stop the movies from grossing billions, nor did the films noticeably corrupt the little ones...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Narnia Hits While Golden Compass Flops | 5/15/2008 | See Source »

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