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Vladimir Putin tries hard to convince the world that Russian business has changed since the wild '90s, when it was synonymous with dodgy privatization and contract killings. These days he wants to depict the Russian corporate world as dynamic, modern - and predictable. That image shattered last week when the Kremlin went head to head with Russia's richest man, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the 40-year-old proprietor of the oil giant Yukos and the richest man in Russia. The markets dropped abruptly, and polite discourse was infused with language reminiscent of The Godfather. The operation against Khodorkovsky, pundits and Yukos supporters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Going For The Moguls | 7/20/2003 | See Source »

...Kameyama argues that Japanese viewers already get plenty of fantasy from Hollywood and are hungry for domestic productions in which they can see reflections of their own lives and experiences. That's why the whole Bayside Shakedown universe was designed as a metaphor for Japan, Inc. "We wanted to depict the daily struggles that average salarymen and office ladies face every day," he says. "We simply transferred it to a police setting." This approach also makes abundant financial sense, adds leading man Oda: "There is no way we can compete with Hollywood budgets. So we do what they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crime Fighters Unbound | 7/14/2003 | See Source »

...oldest residential street in the U.S. You may notice tiny mirrors jutting from the top floors. Called busy-body mirrors, these contraptions, which enable people to see who is coming down the street, were brought back from Holland by Franklin. Also look out for black iron plaques that depict four fists locked in the fire fighter's carry. These plaques indicated that a house was insured against fire, insurance being one of Franklin's imports from London...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Following in His Footsteps: In the City That Ben Loved | 7/7/2003 | See Source »

...Turner Prize nominations have become the British art scene's annual rite of ridicule. Last week's announcement that the shortlist included ceramist Grayson Perry, whose works depict scenes from the life of his alter ego, a woman named Claire, gave the tabloids more than their usual grist for outrage at the state of contemporary art. pornographic potter gunning for ?20,000, screeched the Daily Mail. But the tabs' time might be better spent exploring the cozy relationship between the Turner Prize judges and the nominees. Andrew Wilson, who short-listed Perry, was paid to pen a catalog essay...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Question Of Judgment | 6/1/2003 | See Source »

...particularly important to Hassan, who - despite the restrictions imposed on his movement in the Arab world by his Israeli citizenship - desperately wants his message to be heard throughout the Middle East, including Israel. That's why Hassan made sure his film would be the first documentary to depict people on both sides of the battle in Jenin. Hassan allows neither Israeli nor Palestinian to be seen purely as victim. "Before I criticize Israel, I should look at myself," says Hassan, 43. "We're not saints, but Israelis also can't be allowed to believe that they're saints...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jenin On Film | 5/18/2003 | See Source »

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