Arsenal sack Unai Emery after seven games without a win

Arsenal have sacked boss Unai Emery following a run of seven games without a win.

The Gunners have confirmed Freddie Ljungberg will take charge on an interim basis and pointed to “results and performances not being at the level required” for the reason behind Emery’s exit.

The 48-year-old replaced Arsene Wenger in May 2018 but was unable to take the club back to the Champions League, finishing fifth last season and losing the Europa League final to Chelsea.

The start of this season has proved a challenge and a 2-1 defeat to Eintracht Frankfurt on Thursday night proved to be the last straw.

Speaking on behalf of the Arsenal board and the club’s owners Kroenke Sports & Entertainment, Josh Kroenke said: “Our most sincere thanks go to Unai and his colleagues who were unrelenting in their efforts to get the club back to competing at the level we all expect and demand. We wish Unai and his team nothing but future success.”

The club statement added: “The decision has been taken due to results and performances not being at the level required.

“We have asked Freddie Ljungberg to take responsibility for the first team as interim head coach. We have full confidence in Freddie to take us forward.

“The search for a new head coach is underway and we will make a further announcement when that process is complete.”

The likes of Wolves boss Nuno Espirito Santo and former Arsenal midfielder Mikel Arteta, currently a coach at Manchester City, have been linked with the full-time job.

But it remains to be seen how long Ljungberg, promoted from manager of Arsenal’s Under-23s to Emery‘s assistant head coach during the summer, will remain in charge.

His first game at the helm will come away to Norwich on Sunday before a home game with Brighton and a London derby at West Ham.

Speculation had been rife over Emery’s future during a poor run of form which leaves Arsenal without a win since October 24.

He was publicly backed by head of football Raul Sanllehi and managing director Vinai Venkatesham during the international break but lasted only two more matches.

Alexandre Lacazette’s injury-time goal rescued a point at home to struggling Southampton on Saturday before the 2-1 defeat to Frankfurt, in front of a sparse Emirates Stadium crowd, ultimately saw Emery lose his job.

 

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The two managers ready to replace Emery at Arsenal…

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Poor Unai
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Watching Emery on the touchline last night, I couldn’t help but feel sorry for him. The man just looks horribly out of his depth. He is clearly doing everything he can, but it’s just not good enough. The club refuse to put him out of his misery and the fans’ anger is turning into apathy. After what happened at PSG I wonder if emery will recover from this. The man looks traumatised by it all.
Jeff, Harare

 

Who’s next?
Blocking out, for a moment, the pathetic results at Arsenal, surely greatest the consideration any club must have before changing their manager is who is available.

The more time passes, the more Arsene’s run of top four finishes seems to deserve respect. But the mistake Arsenal made was to change things when Arsenal has run out of steam, not when the time was right to recruit the next long-term manager.

There was a point a few years back when it seemed Jurgen Klopp was almost certain to be Arsene’s successor. He took a year off. But Arsene was not ready to go, and the club missed their window. Things are different now, but it’s unarguable that Liverpool was a better job than Arsenal at the time Klopp signed.

The point is, Emery and Arsenal’s form is dire – but the decision to sack him is less important than the decision to recruit. If the board thinks Ljungberg as a caretaker is better than the status quo, then by all means pull the trigger.

But results aside, two facts stick out. Emery never seemed a long term option at Arsenal. There are two (Allegri and Poch) top tier managers without clubs who might consider the gig. Even without the dip in form, the recruitment of the right replacement should be more important that the redundant argument about when time is up for Emery.
Ben

 

Nuno’s made for Arsenal
Letting a 2-goal lead slip, no wonder Arsenal have Nuno as their top choice
Schlomo Jenkins

 

Brexit means Brexit
I’d just like to say I’m really pleased Arsenal are the only club really trying to adhere to the results of the people’s vote. We are desperate to leave Europe and have no intention of returning. It’s a hard brexit all the way baby. F deals, F financial ruin and let’s really tow the party line of take from the poor and give to the rich.

Arsenal. The true people’s club.
Lee, Bristol.

 

…Well that was depressing. One of the most punctured performances I’ve seen from any team. Frankfurt were absolutely woeful in the first half and the Arsenal of even a couple of months ago would probably have put the game to bed then. Willock looks headless and unfocused, Tierney looked utterly bereft of confidence (in comparison to his debut v Liege, a startling decline in such a short time). The succession of players coming off injured only added to the sense of a house crumbling silently down.
Karen Carney is not great co-commentator, she is from the classic say what you see, cliché brigade. She seemed shocked that Arsenal could turn in such a performance, really the shock is that its not surprising anymore.
The game did at least have one bizarre, entertaining moment when Emery was forced to change out of his black coat as it ‘matched’ the Frankfurt strip. As if one of their players would send a raking diagonal over to the touchline thinking a teammate was in acres of space, mistaking his frantic gestures for inviting the pass.
A lackey was sent running and came back with a different colour coat, still complete with his initials. Always amazes me clubs think managers need initialled uniforms, do they think there is anyone in the stadium that doesn’t know who he is?
Anyway, Emery out. Sorry fella.
Dave, Brighton

 

The kids were alright
The result notwithstanding, I thought last night went really well for United’s youth. Despite the very respectful comments from Roman Hrygorchuck prior to the match, it was always going to be tough going for a team with mostly teenage debutants facing a team of experienced pros (whatever you think about the Kazakhstan league). On balance, the result was the right – we were much better in the first half and took a deserved lead, while Astana came out in the second with renewed vigour and ultimately made the pressure tell. My main concern before the match was that being on the receiving end of a spanking could do more damage than good, but the kids can come home with their heads held high.

I thought Ethan Laird was excellent on the right pretty much all game. He showed good concentration, strength and tackling ability when defending, and offered a good attacking outlet too. In some ways it’s a shame that we have Dalot and Wan-Bissaka in his way, but he is definitely one to watch. His main rival for man of the match (in my books anyway) was Dylan Levitt, who was excellent in the centre of midfield; excellent and economic use of the ball, great vision and technical ability, he looks a real player and hopefully it won’t be too long before we see him in the first team again. He and Garner worked really well together, though Garner wasn’t able to affect the game in an attacking sense as much as he usually does for the under-23s. Di’Shon Bernard was also really good at centre-back and was really unlucky to concede but he certainly shouldn’t feel bad about that – it was no Phil Jones moment.

Gomes and Greenwood looked lively in attack; you can tell that Greenwood has been playing more senior football because his overall game looks a lot more polished (and he wasn’t far off scoring, but for a great save from Eric) in comparison – I would rather see Gomes go out on loan for the second half of the season to get a bit more senior football under his belt. Tuanzebe continued to show that he’s a good prospect, if in need of a little refinement here and there, but he’s still clearly better than Phil Jones.

Beyond that, it was pretty much 7/10 for everyone, except Shaw. I know he’s been out injured and isn’t really match sharp but last night served as further evidence of why he is no longer first choice left-back. He’s been unlucky with injuries since he joined United but there comes a time when you’ve got to stop talking about potential or future improvements and start looking objectively at current ability. I think we’re now seeing a pretty fair representation of what Luke Shaw is capable of and, disappointingly, it’s not great. Brandon Williams, although still very raw, looks like everything Shaw used to be and more besides; I don’t think Shaw has it in him to reach the level he was expected to and, unfortunately, I don’t think even ousting Williams is within his gift right now. That might change now he has genuine competition for his place but it remains to be seen if he has either the fight or the fitness to see that through.

Speaking of players who haven’t lived up to their hype, it just had to be bloody Lingard who scored, didn’t it? He got the usual praise from his apologists (unfortunately Solskjaer seems to be chief among them) but, for my money, did little to really earn any plaudits besides the finish. In a game where he was handed the captain’s armband, there was no real evidence of maturity or leadership; if anything, he simply used the occasion to indulge his own ego. The number of times he ran down blind alleys or dribbled straight into a mass of defenders was so irritating, and his overall use of the ball was everything we come to expect – utterly pointless and forgettable. Maybe I’m being overly harsh but I cannot stress enough just how much I don’t want to see Lingard playing for us, and last night only feels like it’s going to make it more likely. Also, if Chong reckons he can cut it at Juventus then fair play to him, but until he can actually play football like a professional, I just don’t see that happening.

All in all, I was pleased with how the youngsters did and the best thing to come out of it is that a good number of them got some senior minutes in a proper game. I know it was a dead rubber ony paper but you try telling the Astana players that. Hopefully we’ll see a few of last night’s participants against Alkmaar in the final game, though it probably won’t be as young a team next time out, with first place still up for grabs. But Ole deserves some credit for having the guts to play such a young side – not many people in his position would go that far, whether the group was wrapped up or not. I just hope that some of those who impressed get another chance to do so in some more competitive fixtures.
Ted, Manchester

 

Snowflake mentality
I started a mail earlier in the week following JN’s piece but gave up on it. However DBM’s mail stirred the same thoughts.

My response to DBM is simply that’s it fine to think Mourinho is a bit of a shit, he is, and you’re entitled to say that he is. You’d be entitled to say it if he were a saint.

It was a well written piece, but you could have just tweeted “I think Mourinho is a dick”, it would have been a lot easier. Can’t we leave character assassinations with the SJW mobs on twitter and talk about football? It is the Football365 mailbox after all.

The “Mourinho is great” camp have fallen into this trap too, but it seems at least to link it to Spurs’ immediate future.

The only link I can make from the “we don’t like him” camp is that any improvement in performance will only be temporary, which is extremely nihilistic really. Their form was crap, short term improvement beats continued decline everytime.

Maybe he’s carved out a niche for himself. Certain managers have long been known for their powers to avoid relegation. Perhaps Jose can avoid relegation from the top 6? Return to champs league over 2 seasons, maybe a trophy.

Football 365 has already written about how it may be the perfect match. So let’s just leave it as “Mourinho is the perfect man for the Spurs job at the time”. Change my mind.

As for JN…

I was sorry to hear about the loss of your football, though I’ll admit I’ve not got round to reading the tell all tale yet. I assume it went over the fence and your neighbour is a real git. Wait, what? It’s not a literal football? It’s about the abstract concept of football? Well, yes I suppose that wouldn’t have been a very catchy title.

Until now I’d been making some weird assumptiond about people who profess to “love” football.

“Winning” is more than some divine mental ability granted only to the few, however the article lives between literal and metaphor. A fine example of taking offence at specific words; the style of the statement.

It’s much easier than addressing the substance of “Spurs are more likely to win something with Jose Mourinho than if the club had continued with Mauricio Pochettino and the form of the club at the end of his tenure”. But then that’s rather a mouthful, isn’t it? If only there were a short hand…

There’s a line in my favourite TV show (Friday Night Lights) where, on the practice field, Coach Taylor tells his players “Success in not a goal, it’s a byproduct.”

Sports are infinitely complex and can rest on a single mistake. Aim to be the best player and teammate you can possibly be. Do the tiny things which will give you an edge. Full commitment and focus in training sessions, prioritising the game over other aspects of your life, the fame, advertising deals, tabloid articles and social media.

Now clearly a psyche cannot be studied, but it can be observed in the acts and behaviours of an individual. These are conclusions drawn (imperfectly) from the past. However imperfect this is, it is less so than drawing a conclusion in the absence of evidence.

When rolling a dice you wouldn’t choose 6 just because it was a 6 last roll. You know each number has a 1/6 chance. However if the last 10 rolls were all 6s you might suspect there is something intrinsic about the dice which makes a 6 more likely. It might be a fair dice and a statistically unlikely outcome, or it could be rigged.

Football isn’t a game with known statistics, therefore arguably a history of “winning” is an even more relevant consideration. Every job interview I’ve had was competency based. Had I deconstructed the meaning of “excellent communication skills” instead of providing examples of me demonstrating this previously, I dont think I’d have been successful.

So either Mourinho’s success was a statistical improbability, or there is something intrinsic about him as a manager which increases the likelihood of his team being victorious. As with life, the answer will lie somewhere in between the two.

Adam Hurrey already wrote the excellent ‘Football Cliches”, you might enjoy it, it highlights all the literal absurdities of the football lexicon.

You write in a manner of which I could only dream, but its style over substance.

And now, to football… oh I’ve run out of time? Oh ok, thanks.
Richard

 

Hillsborough verdict
Can’t really say much on it in case there’s an appeal of some sort but thoughts are with the families of the 96 once again. Remarkable how a chap can admit to mishandling and leading a bunch of people to their deaths and then admit to lying in the immediate aftermath about what went on and yet not be held accountable or responsible.

In fairness in a country where the prime minister can be openly racist or homophobic and remain in charge whilst lying through his teeth on pretty much every other subject…I suppose anything is possible.

If you read this website and you’re 18 then make sure you register to vote. The 23 year old version of yourself will thank you.
Minty, LFC

 

Prime position?
Now, I know as much about business as I do about women (which is s*d all, natch) but if a fellow 365-er out there can I help me out I’d be grateful.

I’m talking about Amazon Prime (exclusively) screening 10 PL fixtures on 3 – 5 December and another 10 on 26-27th December. What I don’t understand is the business thinking behind it. If you had to pay to join Amazon Prime I’d understand, but all anybody has to do is sign up for a 30-day trial, which is completely free, and simply cancel before the 30 days expire and you get to watch the lot.

I don’t know what they’ve paid the PL for the privilege, but I can’t believe they’d have enough numbers of people wanting to switch to Prime permanently, purely on the back of watching some footie games? Or is this Amazon dipping their toes in the water in terms of seeing how many people watch with a view to repeating the exercise in the future but absolutely making that pay-per-view?

Now call me a bluff old heterosexual, but surely the latter isn’t feasible unless the intention is to outbid either Sky or BT for their ‘packages’? People wouldn’t swallow paying all 3 for PL games surely?

I don’t mind being called out as a dumbass if I’ve missed something spectacularly obvious. Equally, if Amazon have a plan that is more cunning than a fox who’s just been appointed Professor of Cunning at Oxford University, I’d really like to know as I don’t know of any major business that gives away freebies without a catch.

Ta muchly.
Mark (At least it’s not another mail about Mourinho) MCFC.

 

Frenk talk
Couldn’t agree more about the aimless group Barca look without Messi. You also have to spare a thought for Frenkie De Jong, he looks a class above his midfield teammates I assume he thought it was still the free flowing Guardiola football he was joining, you see him try to play quick passing football and everyone around him slowing the pace as soon as they get the ball. Imagine how good he could have been in Manchester city’s midfield, Rodri is a good player but the thought of De Jong driving play forward linking up with De Bruyne and David Silva could have been a Liverpool stopping recipe.
Aaron. CFC. Ireland.

 

Oh, Mr Fernandes
Last night I watched Sporting Lisbon beat PSV, one player who could be one to watch is a midfielder called Bruno Fernandes, scored twice and assisted two goals as well, would love to see him in the Premier League soon, wonder if he has a release clause?
Mikey, CFC

 

National traits
It’s 3am stateside and I can’t sleep, so naturally one’s mind wanders. From an international perspective, I’m fascinated by stylistic differences (footballing, of course). Brazilian fullbacks, Italian Centerbacks, Argentine Trequaristas, German everythings, etc. To spice things up, you can only choose from European countries that have never won major honors (World Cup and/or Euros… British Home Championship winners allowed lol). Here’s my best go:

4-4-2

GK – Polish
Fullbacks – Irish
CBs – Serbian
Holding Mid – Scottish
Box to Box Mid – Croatian
Wingers – Ukrainian
In the Hole – Belgian
Striker – Bulgarian

I was tempted to shoehorn Hungary in the side in some way, on historical pedigree, but couldn’t pull the trigger. I felt like Romania may have deserved a shout too. The soft Scotch underbelly of the side may be my undoing.

What say you?
Seth, Birmingham, AL – Hammer Down

 

Champ manager
It all began with Euro ’96 as anyone and everyone tried to cash in on the nation’s football fever. A magazine was released with Shearer on the cover and a CD full of demos for various football games – Premier Manager, Ultimate Soccer Manager and Championship Manager 1993/94 among them. I played them all and was most taken with Premier Manager, from memory, but leafing through the magazine I came across a feature on Championship Manager 2. Intrigued by the then-striking use of real pictures (even if only in the background), the fact that players had their full names and the reams of statistics available, I picked up a copy – only to discover that it wouldn’t run on my computer due to its measly 4MB of RAM (yes, kids, 4MB). Not for the last time I had to upgrade my PC to play Champ!

I’m writing this on a brand new laptop. I know that for Christmas I’ll be getting FM20, which by my count is something like my 27th edition of the game, and I’ll push my new laptop to its limit running every league so I can scout for Bulgarian youth prospects and Slovenian veterans who can do a job. I’ve spent thousands upon thousands on PC upgrades and new computers to play the game. I’ve taken imaginary press conferences on long trips when my phone’s died. My first day at university I made my first friend as we bonded over how good Ibrahima Bakayoko was on 97/98. I discovered Mike Duff, a 40k right back who’d dominate in the Champions League. I’ve guided the careers of Freddy Guarin, Willie Howie, Mark Kerr, Adrien Rabiot, Neil Lennon and Danny Murphy, Sam Ayorinde, Riccardo Montolivo and so, so many more starlets, journeymen and never-weres who will live on in my memory and those of countless others.

It’s a spreadsheet where the numbers never quite add up. The graphics have been terrible ever since the makers attempted to show football in 3D. The match engine always has at least one catastrophic flaw in it – whether it can be exploited by your team or is destined to drive us nuts as the opposition beat us for no clear reason is a flip of the coin each year. The database is always biased against your club. And let’s not get started on superkeepers, referees in general and the inevitability of your opponent’s star striker breaking their season-long drought against you…

In short, it’s football, or as close as most of us will ever get to making a living from it. And I can’t wait to see how obsessed I’ll get with the latest version, as always, and just who’ll be joining the pantheon of CM/FM legends who live on forever in a corner of my memory I know should be dedicated to actual important things…
Michael C

 

…Just like Taz, my first taste of Championship Manager came when I was a teenager in around 1996. The version I played was CM2.

For the kids that play it now, Imagine having to buy the German, Spanish, Italian leagues separately as they were separate games.

To up the game of memories related to these games. Did anyone do anything weird whilst playing it? I recall reading a book about Championship manager with stories from people. Someone actually put on a suit to play the champions league final in whilst sitting at their computer.
Kevin

 

Geography corner
Dear Gregory W, Peter Kay is from Lancashire, Farnworth to be precise, remember the vertically challenged Bolton Fans in Phoenix Nights? A clue there perhaps? I know that and I am from Ireland FFS!!! Even his accent is a give away and again I am from Ireland!! While I’m talking here I just thought I’d say that we have our very own version of a “Yorkshire Man” here in Ireland – it’s called a “Corkman” – not a word of a lie a Corkman they will tell you that he is from Cork within 1.35 seconds of meeting him. Reason unknown.
Speedy B – Dublin – 5 in-a-row winners and the actual, and deserving, capital city of Ireland

Mane plays down Liverpool fatigue fears: ‘It is all in the head’

Sadio Mane thinks the key to overcoming fatigue “is all in the head” amid fears over Liverpool’s hectic upcoming fixture list.

They have 11 matches in 34 days from Saturday when they face Brighton at Anfield in a Premier League clash.

A League Cup quarter-final and their trip to the Club World Cup in Qatar have complicated their schedule – but Mane thinks they have the mentality and squad to cope.

“I think it is here,” Mane told Goal, tapping his forehead. “Honestly, I think it is all in the head. The tiredness is in the head, so as long as the body recovers well I think it is not difficult for us to play every single game.

“If the team needs us, and the coach needs us, I think we will be able to play and help the team.

“When they need me I will be ready for the team to give everything. The coach has to decide who will play, but I am here to work every single day, and to be ready to go again every single day.”

When asked if Liverpool could handle their tough fixture schedule, Mane added: “Yeah sure, we are Liverpool! We have a big squad, we have many players who can play and so much quality. It’s part of football – we have to deal with it, play these games if we want to be successful. Without the games you can not win the trophies.

“We have to be focussed on it as hard as we can and try to recover as well as possible from each game. Yeah, it will be tough, we know – we know Salzburg will be a tough game now, but yeah, we are ready.”

 

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Fast & Furious 9 : Dwayne Johnson annonce qu’il ne jouera pas dans le film !

Dwayne Johnson vient de déclarer qu’il ne figurera pas au générique du long métrage “Fast & Furious 9”. Mais l’acteur ne ferme pas la porte à une présence dans le dixième opus de la saga.

Dwayne Johnson ne reprendra pas son rôle de Luke Hobbs dans Fast & Furious 9 ! L’acteur américain vient en effet de l’annoncer au micro de MTV, précisant qu’il pourrait en revanche être de la partie pour le dixième opus de la saga culte.

“L’idée a toujours été que l’univers de Fast & Furious grandisse et se développe”, déclare Dwayne Johnson. “Là, nous ne sommes pas dans Fast & Furious 9 car ils se préparent à tourner le film. Mais qui sait, avec Fast & Furious 10… Parce que, au final, la vérité c’est qu’il y a encore des trucs à régler entre Hobbs et Dom. Ce n’est pas réglé.”

Fast & Furious : un spin-off au féminin piloté par le réalisateur de Deadpool 2

Il faudra donc peut-être attendre Fast & Furious 10 pour assister aux retrouvailles entre Hobbs et Dom, respectivement incarnés à l’écran par Dwayne Johnson et Vin Diesel. Deux acteurs qui, rappelons-le, s’étaient brouillés sur le tournage de Fast & Furious 8.

En attendant, les fans de la franchise pourront voir Dwayne Johnson reprendre son rôle de Luke Hobbs dans Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw, spin-off consacré aux personnages incarnés par la star bodybuildée et Jason Statham, attendu en salles le 7 août 2019. Pour ce qui est de Fast & Furious 9 et Fast & Furious 10, il faudra attendre un peu plus, les sorties étant respectivement calées au 8 avril 2020 et au 31 mars 2021.

Aviez-vous remarqué les petits détails cachés de “Fast & Furious 8” ?

Aviez-vous remarqué ? Emissions Bonus

 

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Un dernier Princesse Malgré elle en préparation : un hommage à son réalisateur décédé

Malgré le décès du réalisateur Gary Marshall, le projet d’un troisième “The Princess Diaries” est maintenu.

Alors que cela fait bientôt 14 ans que le second Princess Diaries est sorti, Julie Andrews a confié que le projet d’un troisième volet se précisait. Aucune date officielle n’a été révélée malgré l’attente des fans mais aussi d’Anne Hathaway qui a déclaré souhaiter reprendre son rôle.

Le premier Princesse malgré elle (2001) nous embarquait dans la vie d’une jeune fille timide et discrète, contrainte d’apprendre quelques règles de bonne conduite lorsqu’elle se retrouve unique héritière d’un petit royaume. Désireuse de n’abandonner ni sa vie d’étudiante, ni ses amis, elle tente tant bien que mal de résister à la pression exercée sur elle. Dans le second volet, Un mariage de princesse (2004), elle commence à assumer son titre avant d’apprendre qu’elle ne peut le garder qu’à la condition de se marier. Entre prétendants maladroits et beaux gosses insupportables, Mia sera rapidement épuisée.

D’enthousiastes réactions se sont fait sentir sur les réseaux sociaux depuis qu’Anne Hathaway, de passage sur un plateau télévisé le 28 janvier, a révélé que l’écriture du scénario était achevée et que tout se concrétisait. Cela serait, selon les actrices, un réel hommage à Gary Marshall qui, avant sa mort, s’était engagé pour un troisième “Princesse”.

Photo publiée sur Instagram, suite à la mort du réalisateur, par Anne Hathaway. Sur la photo, se trouvent Julie Andrews, Gary Marshall et Anne Hathaway pendant le tournage de Princesse Malgré elle (2001) :

Voir cette publication sur Instagram

Une publication partagée par Anne Hathaway (@annehathaway) le

La bande-annonce de “Princesse malgré elle” :

Princesse malgré elle Bande-annonce VF

 

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Sorties ciné : Alita Battle Angel, Ralph 2.0, Vice… Les films américains de la semaine

Anecdotes de tournage, notes d’intention, informations cinéphiles : chaque semaine, découvrez les coulisses des sorties cinéma.

Alita : Battle Angel de Robert Rodriguez

Avec Rosa Salazar, Christoph Waltz, Jennifer Connelly…

Le saviez-vous ? James Cameron envisage depuis longtemps d’adapter sur grand écran “Gunnm” (“Battle Angel Alita” dans les pays anglo-saxons), célèbre manga né de la plume de Yukito Kishiro au début des années 1990. Mais du fait d’un emplois du temps trop chargé (notamment par rapport aux suites d’Avatar), il a finalement choisi de confier la réalisation de Alita: Battle Angel à Robert Rodriguez, metteur en scène atypique possédant un style bien particulier, à qui l’on doit Desperado, Une nuit en enfer ou encore la lucrative saga Spy Kids.

Ralph 2.0 Bande-annonce VF

 

Ralph 2.0 de Rich Moore, Phil Johnston

Avec François-Xavier Demaison, Dorothée Pousséo, Jonathan Cohen…

Le saviez-vous ? Six ans après Les Mondes de Ralph, RALPH 2.0 est la première suite produite pour le cinéma par les studios d’animation Walt Disney depuis l’an 2000 avec Fantasia 2000, qui faisait suite à Fantasia, sorti dans les années 1940. Avant cela, il n’y avait eu que Bernard et Bianca au pays des Kangourous en 1990. RALPH 2.0 est cependant la toute première suite des studios d’animation Disney à avoir été créée par l’équipe du film original (réalisation et scénario).

Vice Bande-annonce VO

 

Vice de Adam McKay

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Avec Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Steve Carell…

Le saviez-vous ? Pour ses recherches sur le personnage de Dick Cheney, le réalisateur Adam McKay a lu la formidable biographie de Robert Caro sur Robert Moses, « The Power Broker », ouvrage intelligent sur l’accession au pouvoir d’un homme et son combat pour y demeurer. “Ensuite, j’ai lu tout ce que je pouvais trouver sur le thème du pouvoir en remontant même à Shakespeare – et c’est alors que le scénario a commencé à prendre forme”, confie le cinéaste.

Long Way Home Bande-annonce VO

 

Long Way Home de Jordana Spiro

Avec Dominique Fishback, Tatum Marilyn Hall, Max Casella…

Le saviez-vous ? Jordana Spiro a commencé à écrire Long Way Home aux alentours de 2009. A cette époque, la future réalisatrice ne savait pas quelle direction donner à sa vie et à sa carrière. Elle a commencé à faire du volontariat dans différentes associations pour trouver de nouvelles perspectives et traversait une crise existentielle. Jordana Spiro a grandi dans un milieu aisé, mais à cette époque elle travaillait au contact de jeunes qui se sentaient aussi perdus qu’elle. 

Happy Birthdead 2 You Bande-annonce VO

 

Happy Birthdead 2 You de Christopher Landon

Avec Jessica Rothe, Israel Broussard, Phi Vu…

Le saviez-vous ? Déjà réalisateur d’Happy Birthdead, Christopher Landon reprend du service pour cette suite. Il s’est entouré de ses collaborateurs du premier film, le superviseur des effets visuels Oliver Taylor, le compositeur Bear McCreary et le directeur de la photographie Toby Oliver. Celui-ci a d’ailleurs utilisé le même matériel et les mêmes objectifs que pour le tournage du précédent opus : le modèle léger et compact ARRI Alexa Mini avec un objectif zoom Angénieux Optimo et un objectif fixe Cooke S4. L’équipe a accueilli en son sein de nouveaux venus, le chef décorateur Bill Boes, le monteur Ben Baudhuin et la costumière Whitney Anne Adams. Ensemble, ils ont investi à nouveau Loyola University à la Nouvelle-Orléans, décor principal du film original.

Dragon Ball Super Broly : embarquez dans un TGV aux couleurs de la célèbre saga !

Pour célébrer la sortie prochaine (le 13 mars) de Dragon Ball Super Broly, Bandai Namco s’associe avec la SNCF en permettant aux usagers de voyager dans des trains Ouigo habillés aux couleurs de Dragon Ball Super.

Ils ne se déplacent pas aussi vite que Whis ou le nuage magique de Goku mais nos bons vieux TGV ont de la ressource ! Dès le 24 février et jusqu’au 12 mars, les voyageurs auront l’opportunité de grimper à bord de trains Ouigo entièrement décorés aux couleurs de Dragon Ball Super Broly.

Plus de 30 000 personnes sont attendues pour prendre place dans ces trains qui circuleront durant deux semaines. Les TGV circuleront entre Paris, Marseille, Lyon Saint-Exupéry, Marne-la-Vallée, Roissy CDG, Aix-en-Provence, Avignon, Lille Flandres, Toulon, Nice, Antibes, Cannes, Saint-Raphaël et Nice. Pour l’instant, Namek et la planète de Maître Kaio ne sont des destinations desservies.

À noter que le 27 février, les usagers du train de 7h07 (Paris Gare Lyon/Nice aller/retour) pourront gagner leur voyage en participant à un tournoi sur le jeu vidéo Dragon Ball Fighter Z. Une borne sera installée à cet effet dans la rame centrale du train.

Les Super Saïyen seront également célébrés au Forum des Halles et à la gare de Lyon durant la période du 22 février au 4 mars :

Forum des Halles – place Carrée 

Du vendredi 22 au dimanche 24 février de 10h à 20h30

– Espace kids avec les visites des mascottes de Goku et Vegeta
– Initiation au jeu de cartes Dragonball
– Photocall
– Corner Gashapons, les célèbres distributeurs automatiques Japonais.
– Bornes de jeux vidéo
– Pop-up store avec la loterie événementielle Ichiban Kuji
– Invités spéciaux, quizz, goodies, tournois et bien d’autres surprises !

Gare de Lyon

Du 26 février au 4 mars 

– Corner Gashapons
– Bornes de jeux vidéo
– Mascottes des personnages Goku et Vegeta
– Distribution de goodies

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For Steiner, Haas’ 2019 season can’t end soon enough

Haas team boss Guenther Steiner says another disappointing performance from the US outfit in Mexico was somewhat mitigated by the Italian’s very low expectations.

Neither Romain Grosjean nor Kevin Magnussen were ever a force to be reckoned with for Haas’ midfield rivals, with both drivers concluding their race at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez well out of the top ten.

Haas’ Mexican weekend was simply a story of its VF19 crucially lacking speed.

    Haas’ Grosjean and Magnussen get NASCAR ride at COTA

“The way we directed the race was okay, it’s the car is just not fast enough,” Steiner said. “

“What can you do? You try to get the best out of it, especially with Kevin that’s what was there, there wasn’t more there. That’s it. So that’s the positive.”

Still, one feels that for Steiner, this year’s troubled campaign just can’t end soon enough.

“I’m not disappointed because my hopes were always very low, so it’s like the disappointment goes away. The best news? It’s only three more [races] to go!”

Unlike his boss, Grosjean was hard pressed to find anything positive about his weekend in Mexico, the Frenchman’s comments sounding all too familiar.

“It was a tough afternoon with nothing working very well,” Grosjean said.

“Let’s hope the next race is better. We need to find out what’s going on with the car because it didn’t feel right since FP3 and the race confirmed that.”

Speculating on the weekend ahead, Haas’ home race in Austin, Steiner believes his team will at least fare better than last Sunday.

“Austin will still be difficult, but not as bad as Mexico,” he reckoned.

“With the high altitude we struggled more and we knew coming here that this will be (difficult) and it was.”

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Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

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Renault weighs appeal of disqualification sanction

Renault has acknowledged its exclusion from the Japanese GP following a protest of its car’s braking system and is now considering an appeal of the Stewards’ decision.

The French outfit was protested by rival Racing Point which claimed the Renault used a pre-set lap distance-dependent brake-bias adjustment system on its R.S.19 that breached the FIA’s technical and sporting regulations.

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The FIA’s investigation into the matter concluded that Renault’s brake system did not breach current technical regulation.

It did however constitute a driver aid, and as such was not in compliance with the governing body’s sporting regulations. Hence the exclusion of both Daniel Ricciardo and Nico Hulkenberg from the Japanese GP’s final results.

    Renault drivers excluded from Japanese GP results!

“Despite the FIA concurring with Renault that the system was entirely legal under the FIA Technical Regulations, it was judged by the stewards that the system was in breach of the FIA Sporting Regulations regarding driver aid,” said Renault in a statement released late on Wednesday.

“Both Renault cars were disqualified from the Japanese Grand Prix and the team loses the nine points scored.

“However, considering the subjectivity of the qualification of a system as a driver aid and the variability of the associated penalties in recent cases, Renault F1 Team will consider its next course of action within the timeframe laid out by the FIA.”

©Renault

Renault must file its appeal on Thursday before 10 am local time (Mexico). Its point on “variability of the associated penalties in recent cases” clearly refers to a sanction handed out to Alfa Romeo after this year’s German Grand Prix.

The Swiss outfit was also found in breach of the sporting rules for the illegal use of drivers aids at the start of the race, but its drivers were hit with a 30-second time penalty rather than an exclusion from the race’s results.

However, the Japanese GP stewards underscored the fact that Renault’s penalty should be deemed more severe because of the relative benefits achieved by the incriminated driver aid.

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

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