Entertainment Briefs for May 27, 2010
Rip Torn seeks to resolve Conn. break-in charges
LITCHFIELD, Conn. - Rip Torn's attorney says he and prosecutors are discussing a resolution to charges that Torn broke into a Connecticut bank while intoxicated and carrying a loaded gun.Torn appeared briefly in Litchfield Superior Court on Tuesday. Attorney A. Thomas Waterfall says he hopes to resolve the case in a way that keeps the 79-year-old actor out of prison.
Torn has pleaded not guilty to trespassing, carrying a gun while intoxicated, carrying a gun without a permit, burglary and criminal mischief.Police say he broke into the Salisbury bank Jan. 29 while highly intoxicated, thinking it was his home in the rural northwestern Connecticut town.
Waterfall says Torn has gone through alcohol rehabilitation and gotten rid of all of his weapons.
Iran releases renowned filmmaker on $200,000 bail
TEHRAN, Iran - Iran released an internationally renowned filmmaker and opposition supporter on bail Tuesday after more than two months in custody, state TV reported.Jafar Panahi, who has won awards at the Chicago, Cannes and Berlin film festivals, was freed on bail of about $200,000, but the report said his indictment would be sent to a revolutionary court for future action.
The decision came about a week after the 49-year-old filmmaker began a hunger strike to protest his imprisonment. He also demanded to be allowed to see his family, meet with a lawyer and be set free pending trial.It was unclear what charges Panahi faces. Cases referred to revolutionary courts are usually security related.
Panahi was taken into custody after Iranian security forces raided the filmmaker's Tehran home in early March. A state prosecutor has said Panahi's detention is not political and the filmmaker is suspected of committing unspecified "offenses."The filmmaker supported Iran's opposition following the disputed June presidential election in which Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was declared the winner. Panahi was briefly detained last summer when he visited the gravesides of the victims of Tehran's postelection unrest and was later banned from traveling abroad.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner welcomed the release of Panahi and expressed regret that the filmmaker wasn't able to attend the just-ended Cannes film festival. Panahi had been invited as a member of the jury and an empty chair was left for him in protest."We hope that as quickly as possible he can return to his artistic activities which honor Iranian cinema," a statement by Kouchner said.
Several of Panahi's films have been banned from showing in Iran.Iran has detained more than 80 political activists and figures accused of fomenting postelection unrest since August, sentencing them to death and prison terms, from six months to 15 years.
Tehran's prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dowlatabadi met Panahi in prison after he began his hunger strike.Ahmadinejad's re-election has been challenged by a range of public figures, including filmmakers and singers who have expressed support for the opposition and criticized the harsh government crackdown on street protesters.
The opposition contends Ahmadinejad won through fraud and that opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi was the rightful winner.