November 1, 2018

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Ewan McGregor Joins 'Birds of Prey'; Here's Everything We Know

Christopher Robin

Margot Robbie will reprise her Suicide Squad role as Harley Quinn in the upcoming Birds of Prey; she will also serve as a producer. Her character was very much her own woman; smart, strong and sassy, she did whatever she felt was best for herself in any particular moment. So it should be exciting to see her lead the way in a project that’s been described as a “girl gang movie.”

Ewan McGregor, who most recently played a heroic family man in Christopher Robin (above), leads the latest casting news, which will find him turning toward the dark side. We have details about that, along with everything else we know, below.

Who are the Birds of Prey?

In DC Comics, the superhero Black Canary first appeared in 1947. She has often teamed up with other heroic crime fighters through the years. She began a partnership with Barbara Gordon, daughter of Gotham City police commissioner James Gordon, and their team was called Birds of Prey. In the most recent reincarnation in 2016, the team includes Barbara Gordon (aka Batgirl), Black Canary and another superhero known as Huntress.

Wait, so Harley Quinn will be a crime fighter?

In one comic book incarnation, Harley Quinn was part of a team (The Secret Six) that aided/bedevilled the heroes. In the TV series Birds of Prey, Harley Quinn (as played by Mia Sara) was a villainous guest star. We’ve already seen how the character behaved in Suicide Squad, so we don’t expect to see Harley Quinn as any sort of traditional hero — that’s just not her style!

It’s probably more than coincidental, by the way, that writer Christina Hodson, who penned the Birds of Prey script, has now been engaged to write Batgirl, though we’re still waiting to hear if Batgirl will actually make an appearance in this movie. Perhaps a cameo?

Who else will star?

Ewan McGregor is in final negotiations to play Black Mask, according to The Wrap. As the outlet previously reported, Black Mask will be the villain of the piece; he is a mob boss in Gotham City and has also been a fierce foe of Batman.

First appearing in DC Comics in 1985, Black Mask has not been portrayed on the big screen before. In the comics, Black Mask murdered his parents to seize control of their corporation, then lost everything, prompting him to go on a vengeful rampage.

McGregor joins Robbie, Mary Elizabeth Winstead (as Huntress), Jurnee Smollett-Bell (as Black Canary) and Rosie Perez (as Renee Montoya). Huntress is a superhero who has taken different forms in DC Comics; in the movie, she is a former “mafia princess,” per Deadline, who “saw her family killed at a young age” and became a vigilante. Black Canary is “an expert fighter [who] is known for her ‘canary cry,’ per THR. Renee Montoya is an openly gay police detective, who, during the New 52 comic series, “took on a costumed identity, becoming the Question,” per The Wrap.

Who is directing?

Cathy Yan. She is a former journalist who began making short films before making her feature directorial debut with Dead Pigs. The independent movie debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in January, where it won the World Cinema Dramatic Award For Ensemble Acting. Zazie Beetz (Deadpool 2) stars in the comedy-drama, which follows a diverse group of characters who are affected when thousands of dead pigs begin floating down a river in China.

When might we see the movie?

The goal is start production in January 2019. Warner Bros. has set Birds of Prey to open in theaters everywhere on February 7, 2020.

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U. Of Maryland Board Of Regents Chair Resigns, Fallout Continues From Athlete's Death

James Brady, chairman of the University System of Maryland Board of Regents, speaking at a news conference on Oct. 30, resigned on Thursday after days of outrage over the board’s recommendation that football head coach DJ Durkin retain his job.

Patrick Semansky/AP


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Patrick Semansky/AP

The chairman of University System of Maryland’s Board of Regents resigned on Thursday amid outrage from faculty, trustees and students after the board’s handling of an investigation into a football player’s death earlier this year.

“In my estimation, my continued presence on the board will inhibit its ability to move Maryland’s higher education agenda forward. And I have no interest in serving as a distraction from that important work,” James Brady wrote in a statement Thursday afternoon.

“Accordingly, I will step down from the Board of Regents immediately,” he said.

Brady informed the board of his plans to step down in a closed-door meeting following days of public outcry for the chair to resign. His announcement is the latest in a whirlwind of personnel decisions this week at the University of Maryland, involving the football head coach and the university president.

On Tuesday the board said it would allow DJ Durkin to resume his position running the football program. He had been on paid administrative leave. Durkin was forced to step aside as President Wallace Loh launched investigations into allegations that the football program fostered a “toxic culture” and into the events surrounding the death of offensive lineman Jordan McNair. The sophomore collapsed of heatstroke during a team workout in May. He died two weeks later.

Also on Tuesday, Loh revealed he would resign as of June, and he apparently still intends to do that.

Both decisions led to widespread condemnation of the board of regents and a day later Loh fired Durkin. In a statement, Loh said he had met with student organizations, deans and campus leaders who “expressed serious concerns about Coach DJ Durkin returning to the campus.”

“This is a difficult decision, but it is the right one for our entire University,” Loh added.

The move, however, did not stem the backlash against the regents from members of the University of Maryland College Park Foundation Board of Trustees, who, on Thursday, claimed the regents “evidently forced” Loh into retirement.

They are calling for Loh to remain at the helm of the university.

In a Thursday letter to regents chair James Brady, Foundation Chair Geoff Gonella slammed the regents for their handling of the aftermath of the young football player’s death. He accused them of deliberately taking steps designed to undermine Loh and “create the false impression that Dr. Loh had mismanaged the issues surrounding the death of Jordan McNair.”

The regents had overreached by “meddling” in the “hiring or firing of football coaches on campus or any other personnel for that matter,” Gonella wrote, adding that its actions may have derailed the university’s fundraising efforts for the state’s flagship campus.

“Let us remind you that we are in the middle of a $1.5 billion campaign to raise funds for the Flagship of the System. … You may have dealt our efforts a fatal blow,” Gonella said.

Also on Thursday, university Provost Mary Ann Rankin and more than a dozen deans expressed similar sentiments in a letter to the regents.

“Through its intervention, the Board of Regents usurped the President’s authority and intervened in the ability of the President to carry out his full duties and responsibilities. Neither the by-laws of the Board of Regents nor state law give authority to the Regents to take such actions,” Rankin wrote.

She also called for Loh to rescind his resignation: “We believe Dr. Loh’s leadership is critical for the university at this challenging time and we call upon the Board of Regents and the Chancellor to publicly affirm its support for Dr. Loh’s continued leadership of the state’s flagship university.”

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, who originally appointed Brady to the board of regents, had called on Brady to resign in the wake of the board’s recommendation to retain Durkin, saying in a statement that he was “deeply concerned about how they could have possibly arrived at the decisions announced.”

Upon learning that Brady had quit on Thursday, Hogan’s spokeswoman Amelia Chasse told NPR, “The governor believes that the university system must move forward in an open and transparent manner to restore public trust in Maryland’s flagship university.”

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2 Goldman Sachs Bankers Charged In Malaysian Financial Scandal

The Justice Department has brought criminal charges against two former Goldman Sachs bankers and a Malaysian financier in connection with the financial scandal known as 1MDB, which involved the misuse billions of dollars in Malaysian government funds.

In the indictment unsealed by a federal court Thursday, prosecutors accuse former Goldman Sachs banker Ng Chong Hwa and financier Low Taek Jho – known as “Jho Low” — with conspiring to launder money embezzled from 1Malaysia Development Berha — known as 1MDB — Malaysia’s investment development fund, as well as conspiring to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

The Justice Department also says another former Goldman Sachs banker, Tim Leissner, has pleaded guilty to conspiring to launder money and violate anti-bribery laws. A lawyer for Leissner was unavailable for comment when NPR phoned.

News reports say Ng has been arrested in Malaysia. The Wall Street Journal reports that Low was last seen in China but remains at large. The Associated Press quotes a spokesman for Low as saying, “Mr. Low simply asks that the public keep an open mind regarding this case until all of the evidence comes to light, which he believes will vindicate him.”

While the Justice Department has been investigating the 1MDB scandal for some time and has pursued civil lawsuits, these are the first criminal charges the department has brought against individuals related to the 1MDB scandal, according to the Wall Street Journal, which brought international attention to the scandal itself in 2015.

The indictment accuses Leissner and Ng and of using Low’s connections to government officials in Malaysia and Abu Dhabi to “retain business from 1MDB for [Goldman Sachs] through the promise and payment of hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes,” including three bond transactions that raised about $6.5 billion for the 1MDB fund between 2012 and 2013.

While that money was supposed to be used for three development projects, court documents allege the men and their fellow conspirators used the laundered money to pay bribes and “for the personal benefit of the co-conspirators and their relatives and associates, including, among other things, for the purchase of luxury residential real estate in the United States and artwork from an auction house in New York, New York, and the funding of major Hollywood films.”

In total, more than $2.7 billion was misappropriated by the three men and other alleged associates, according to court filings.

Goldman Sachs, which made hundreds of millions from their work with the fund, denies any wrongdoing.

Set up in 2009 by then-Prime Minister Najib Razak to promote foreign investment in Malaysia, the 1MDB fund drew attention when quickly amassed an estimated $11 billion in debt.

An investigation by the Journal revealed millions linked to the fund ended up in Najib’s personal bank accounts. Najib tried to block investigations, but after losing an election earlier this year he was arrested in July and has since been charged with multiple counts of corruption. He denies any wrongdoing.

His wife, Rosmah Mansor, was also arrested in October and charged in connection with the scandal.

The couple are awaiting trial.

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