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Brian Eno's new band, Drawn From Life close the Fuji Rock Festival with their set at the White Stage at 10:50pm Sunday
Beatnik

Brian Eno, a man who needs no introduction, will close this year's Fuji Rock Festival. Dan Grunebaum gets the inside track on Eno's new band, his Fuji Rock set and his take on the industry.

As an early member of Roxy Music, as producer of giants from the Talking Heads to U2, and as the founding father of ambient music, Brian Eno has helped define the trajectory of popular music. But don't ask him about that. Eno wants to talk about his new project, Drawn From Life, the band he formed with German percussionist and DJ J. Peter Schwalm, and their just-released album, Eno's first in four years. He's also delighted to chat about his first live show in virtually two decades last month in Portugal, and his closing set this Sunday at the Fuji Rock Festival. With a bit of help, Metropolis' Dan Grunebaum tracked down Eno by cell phone on his way to catch a train in London, to discuss his new project and the general state of music in the 21st century.

How did you get together with Peter Schwalm?
There's an obvious and boring answer which is that he gave me a CD, I liked it, and got in touch with him. But more interesting is that when we first played, it was an immediately comfortable and synthetic playing relationship. My biggest problem with improvising with people generally is that they retreat into a safe place too quickly for me, and he didn't do that. Sometimes we would get into rather a strange musical place, some emotion that hadn't really been felt before.

Your website describes Schwalm as a percussionist, but the album sounds like it's composed mainly on keyboards. I didn't hear a lot of percussion on the album...
Well it's as live as anything is these days, but our live show is much more live. We've got a drummer and percussionist, so those elements are much more powerfully stated in the live show.

Is this the band that you'll be bringing to Fuji Rock Fest?
Yes, it's a seven-piece band-half English and half German.

I gather you've already done a bit of touring with the new band...
Well, we've played one show. It was very good, very successful, and everybody seemed to like it.

Will you be following up the album with a full-on tour?
No. The word makes me nauseous quite honestly. I just don't feel like doing it at all. I don't mind playing one or two shows and making it real, but the production line nature of touring doesn't suit me.

Japan is quite fertile territory for your music and for electronic music in general. Do you have any sense of affinity between Japan and Britain, which has also been a center for electronic music over the past decade or two?
Yes, I mean the affinity is that Japan is not a big rock and roll nation in the sense that the kind of music that triumphs in America, the sort of testosteronal grunge stuff, doesn't seem to appeal quite so much in Britain, northern Europe, and Japan, where there is a somewhat more restrained feeling. So yes, I think they probably appreciate the subtlety that's involved in that music.

Is there anything particular you've been listening to, any Japanese music?
I am in a bit of a non-listening phase at the moment. For about the last four or five months I just don't want to hear any more music. This usually happens when I want to think something out myself.

What have you been trying to think out?
There are two things that interest me, and they're quite different from one another. I've become interested in the harmonic structure of bells, so I've been trying to see what the psycho-acoustic dimension is. The other thing is I've been writing some new songs, some of which I'll perform during the show. I'm using the concerts as a way of developing them, as a way of pushing them in a way they wouldn't go if I was in the studio. Partly I got fed up with writing in the studio. You know I was one of the first people to say modern music is born from the studio. But this has become completely commonplace and is what everybody does all the time, and I am absolutely bored with it. I want to generate material which has its own strength before it goes into the studio. I did this recently with the band James. I produced their new record, and we decided to do something nobody has done in 25 years, which is to write all the arrangements and lyrics, and then play the songs live, and then record them. It's almost the reverse of what most people are doing now.

How did that work out?
Probably the best album I've ever produced, it should come out today. It's called Pleased to Meet You.

Is it more of a rock thing than your individual music?
Yes, it's definitely pop. But it's actually quite unusual because the structures of the songs are not normal, and the singer, Tim Booth, is really one of the best and most talented singer-songwriters in England.

How does the more cerebral music that you create by yourself fit in with the more popular bands you've produced?
It's not difficult for me to accommodate those. I do a lot of different things, and they don't have to be entirely consistent with one another for me to want to pursue them. I see them all as separate experiments in separate things. For instance, I do quite a lot of lecturing, and that often has very little to do with my music. And I do a lot of visual work, installations and so on. I just like to keep life as interesting as I can, really.

Intricate and delicate: Eno’s new album with recent collaborator J. Peter Schwalm features contributions from Laurie Anderson among others.
Virgin

What does the title Drawn From Life refer to, and was there any particular concept you were working with on the album?
The expression has two meanings. In painting, when something is figurative, you say that picture is drawn from life, so it's informed by your experience of a real object in front of you. The other meaning, though, is taken from the experience of life, drawn out of life. So it was those two meanings I was playing with.

You've been called the father of ambient music. What do you think of the explosion of that music recently?
I think it's all 20 years too late. I expected it so much sooner. It takes such a long time for anything to happen. It's amazing really. You know I've been working for the last ten years on something else which I call generative or emergent music, and I've been thinking for ten years: When are people going to catch on to this? And they will, but I will be an old man by that time. Then I'll be called the father of generative music.

Could you have imagined there would be chill-out rooms at raves where people listen to ambient?
I told people that's what would happen. I remember saying in the future-and I was thinking five years in the future-there will be clubs where you can sit and think. People thought I was completely eccentric. I didn't think it would be 20 years in the future, I thought it would be five years down the line, so it's a slow world.

Now that musical technology has become so democratized, and everyone can produce and burn their own CD in their bedroom, has that been a positive thing for music and unleashed creativity, or has it created a lot of mediocrity?
Both actually. You know, one of the success stories of pop music is that it constantly invites in a lot of talent, because there isn't a huge skill barrier that you have to scale before you do anything. Classical music is set up to exclude almost anyone from taking part in it, because it's technically so difficult to do. This is why classical music is in a bad state of health generally, why it's fossilized and not going anywhere. Well, pop music is constantly refreshed by whole new generations of people with new ideas about how music should be made and listened to, so I think that's all a very healthy process. Of course the downside is there is too much stuff to look through. It's a little bit like the story of the Internet-Jesus it's tedious to go through it all, so you end up relying on complete chance or the good fortune to have friends who recommend things to you. I suppose my main feeling about the overproduction of music is that there is a lot of good stuff that isn't being heard because it didn't make it to the top of the heap.

Do you feel like the message is getting lost with the growth of technological mediums?
No I don't, because I feel that different messages come up with different mediums. I'm a McLuhanite in that I think that the medium is a very big part of the message. If the medium changes there are different messages, and I think there are a lot of stimulating and interesting things going on, things that weren't imagined before. In terms of music, who would have predicted (except for me and I did), that guys shouting poetry would become the most popular form of music? That's basically what hip hop is.

In that case I'd better ask you: What do you think the next trend will be?
Well, it may not be musical, but I certainly think generative music has a big future.

Speaking of the Internet, where do you stand on the Napster debate?
It doesn't affect me very much, but I have to say that if people want to listen multimillion dollar albums, then they have to understand that those have to be paid for. The paradox is that people say music should be free, but they don't download music that is cheap to make, they download very expensively produced music. If people want to get for nothing things that are very expensive to make, well, the result of that is people will stop making expensive things because they can't afford to any more. And that's O.K. I wouldn't mind a future where big budget albums and big budget films were no longer made. Those are already becoming redundant, operatic in their dimensions. The problem with the Napster debate is people think we can just plug Napster in and things will carry on as before. They won't. Everything will dramatically change and won't change back. That's fine as long as you are willing to accept it. Well I have to go as my train is coming...


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IN PERSON:
539: Sea worthy
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538: The public eye
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537: Casting a spell
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536: Page turner
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535: Glitter twins
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534: Character study
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533: The big freeze
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532: Hitting a Homer
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531: Trade deficit
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530: Hey Jude
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529: Field goals
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528: Voice of reason
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527: Rock enroll
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526: Spoils of war
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525: Second acts
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524: State of Grace
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523: Manga mania
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522: Queen of hearts
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521: Remember when
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519: Bilingual beat
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518: Full speed ahead
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517: American dream
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516: Hail the hobbits
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515: In the name of love
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514: Horsing around
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513: Free bird
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512: Girl next door
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511: Emotional baggage
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508: All that jazz
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507: Lord of the rings
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506: Men of honor
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505: A lofty goal
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504: Gallo's humor
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503: Making J-Waves
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502: Glitter Ball
501: Crossing swords
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500: Share the wealth
To commemorate our 500th issue, Metropolis is asking Halloween partygoers to donate ¥500 to help two local children's charities. Chris Betros digs deep.
499: In full bloom
Okinawan-American singer DAHLIA hits the big time, thanks to Japanese rock icon Yoshiki and Expo 2005. Chris Betros meets the young talent.
498: Just for laughs
The Sushi Brothers have a joke for every occasion. Chris Betros meets the wacky pair.
497: Nobel mind
At 79, former US President Jimmy Carter is a busy man championing human rights, world peace and public health, as Carlo Niederberger observes.
496: Broad strokes
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495: Action figure
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494: Show and tell
Yuka Nukina brings the world to Japan on NHK's Weekend Japanology program. Chris Betros tunes in.
493: Pasona non grata
Business maverick Yasuyuki Nambu's vision of a radically new Japanese society doesn't endear him to bureaucrats, but Chris Betros is impressed.
492: Rain man
Author Barry Eisler takes to the mean streets of Tokyo with his second book featuring Japanese-American assassin John Rain. Chris Betros digs deeper.
491: Golden boy
Kosuke Kitajima is the latest athlete to captivate Japan after smashing two world records at the world swimming championships. Fred Varcoe hears about his new life.
490: Murder, she wrote
Award-winning mystery author Natsuo Kirino proves herself a master of the macabre in Out, her first novel to be translated into English. Chris Betros reads between the lines.
489: Life or death
Acclaimed British director Alan Parker's latest film delves into the moral debate surrounding the death penalty. Chris Betros listens in.
488: Work of art
Salma Hayek spent eight years bringing her passion for Mexican artist Frida Kahlo to the big screen. Chris Betros hears the story.
487: A charmed life
Actress Uno Kanda's ultimate goal is to end up being a cute grandma. Chris Betros asks how she intends to do it.
486: He's back
The Terminator returns after a 12-year hiatus as its star Arnold Schwarzenegger ponders a career shift. Chris Betros reports.
485: Prime time
Thirty-something Tomoko Ogawa has found fame and career fulfillment behind the TBS news desk. Chris Betros pays the anchorwoman a visit.
484: Screen test
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483: Angel eyes
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482: No holds barred
Top female pro wrestler Chigusa Nagayo has a growing legion of fans. Sachie Kanda finds out why.
481: Top of the hill
While heading up designer Terence Conran's Roppongi Hills projects, architect Richard Doone took time to get lost in Tokyo. Steve Trautlein reports.
480: Inside the Matrix
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479: Universal themes
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478: On the ball
Japan’s national soccer head coach, Zico, has big plans for the team. Fred Varcoe finds out what’s on his mind.
477: That's a rap
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476: Say the magic word

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475: Bully boy
Bad boy Brad Renfro takes on another tormented youth role in Larry Clark’s no-holds barred drama Bully. Chris Betros tries to figure him out.
474: Inventive mind
From the weird to the wonderful, Dr NakaMats has an invention for every occasion. Chris Betros meets the genius.
473: The king of rock ‘n’ role
Montreal entertainer Martin Fontaine brings The Elvis Story to Japan this month. Sachie Kanda meets the star of the high-energy musical.
472: Inside out
Akiko Shimizu is on a mission: to give Japanese women the skills to make the right choices in their lives. Chris Betros gets a few tips, too.
471: Dramatic intrigue
International star of stage and screen Mozaffar Shafeie gives Stephen Cotterill the lowdown on Tokyo’s theater scene.
470: Guru of gore
Bizarre movie director David Cronenberg is the most normal person he knows. You wouldn’t think so from his films, though, Chris Betros observes.
469: Female bonding
Halle Berry and Rosamund Pike leave 007 shaken and stirred in Lee Tamahori’s Die Another Day. Chris Betros hears more.
468: Baby boom
Pint-sized BRAT has Japan’s pop culture in his sights. Chris Betros talks to his creator, British illustrator John Shelley.
467: Good Lord
Actor Viggo Mortensen dismisses comparisons between Lord of the Rings and the fight against terrorism. Chris Betros lends an ear.
466: Just for thrills
Edward Norton adds Red Dragon to his impressive list of credits. Chris Betros reports.
465: As a Matt of fact
Matt Damon is happy to take on any role, even a sumo wrestler, if the project is right.
464: First bass
Producer and bassist Bill Laswell hits the top without even trying, he tells Tom Bojko.
463: White lies
Aboriginal author Doris Pilkington and filmmaker Phillip Noyce lift the lid on Australia’s “Stolen Generation.” Chris Betros reports.
462: Pottering about
Daniel Radcliffe is enjoying life in the spotlight as Harry Potter works his magic at the box office. Chris Betros reports.
461: In Gere
Richard Gere speaks about getting old, being cool, infidelity and being an activist. Chris Betros takes it all in.
460: Freedom of the press
Maverick newspaper publisher Kiyoharu Nakayama is taking on the big boys with his free newspaper Tokyo Headline. Sachie Kanda reports.
457/458: A farewell to arms
Kathryn Bigelow and Harrison Ford lift the veil on a dramatic Soviet sub disaster in K-19: The Widowmaker. Chris Betros goes below.
456: Leaders of the pack
It was mass adulation as Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese brought Gangs of New York to Japan for the world premiere
454: Future tense
Steven Spielberg and Tom Cruise warn about tomorrow's grim possibilities in their mystery Minority Report
453: Keeping the Faith
Family is the driving force in country singer Faith Hill's life whether she's making CDs or soundtracks
451: Watts the matter
Success has been a long time coming for The Ring star Naomi Watts, but it's all part of a learning experience
450: Class action
Batman and 007 are out, Triple X is in, celluloid superhero Vin Diesel says
449: On the rise
A newly restructured Tower Records is setting the pace in Japan's retail music industry
448: Tomorrow the universe
Justine Pasek knows being Miss Universe will be tough, but having faith and a sense of humor can go a long way
447: Cyber sisterhood
Entrepreneur Kaori Sasaki is spreading the message online that Japan's male-dominated corporate world is under threat from an army of capable women
446: Hot rod heart
The Japan Grand Prix is somewhat of a homecoming for 2001 British Formula 3 Champion Takuma Sato
445: Raking it in
Hugh Grant is in peak form, basically playing himself as the stylish layabout in About a Boy
444: Funny business
Japan is a joke to comedian Simon Bligh, who returns to perform with the Punchline Comedy Club
443: Cartoon Channel
An expert editor and diehard manga fan, Coamix head honcho Nobuhiko Horie is going global with his Raijin Comics series
442: Killa' Milla
Milla Jovovich squeezes in a chat with Nicholas Coldicott about tough schedules, superficiality and flesh-eating zombies
441: The show must go on
Japanese entertainers help to bring Broadway back to life with a charity gala concert.
440: Hip hop pop
Japan's original turntablist tells Dan Grunebaum how music saved his life
439: The long road home
After tasting Hollywood success, Y Tu Mama Tambien director Alfonso Cuaron fled LA for his native Mexico's "holy ground."
438: In the spirit
New Age music virtuoso Kitaro takes to the stage for his Silk Road tour
437: The Tomei express
Marisa Tomei's career is in full flight, Chris Betros observes, as the perky actress alternates between the theater and cinema, her latest effort being In the Bedroom
436: Wells spoken
More than 100 years after HG Wells wrote "The Time Machine," his great-grandson Simon directs the latest movie version
435: Stepping lively
Reva Rice and Kenya Osumi promise plenty of eroticism in the newest version of the hit Broadway musical Fosse
434: Full plate
Tokyo architect Benjamin Warner is about to add another successful design to his portfolio with a chain of delicatessens
433: Brunch break
TV personality Tamao Sato's goal in life is to make people happy
432: Heart beat
Justin Gardiner speaks with the versatile percussionist who took center stage at the World Cup closing ceremony
431: Hard to heart
Former sumo wrestler Konishiki is in great demand these days, but his heart lies in his many charitable endeavors
430: Calling the tunes
Shocking peers, maverick sensei Makoto Nishimura invites foreigners into the cloistered world of the shamisen
429: What women want
Fantasy film Kate & Leopold's Meg Ryan and Hugh Jackman debate the art of seduction
428: The write stuff
Shodo meets suspense in Todd Shimoda's new novel, "The Fourth Treasure."
427: Will and testament
Will Smith takes on his biggest challenge yet in Michael Mann's biopic Ali
426: Foster care
Now a mother of two, Jodie Foster re-emerges in Panic Room, which deals with the issue closest to her heart—family
425: Pop rocks
Britney Spears is big business, but the 20-year-old pop singer sees it all as just good fun
424: No shortcuts for Morgan Freeman
Fame was a long time coming for Morgan Freeman, who gives thanks to providence and friends
423: Universal values
Mina Chiba is equally at home on the stage as Miss Universe Japan as she is on a car racing circuit
422: Tsuzuki style
Kyoichi Tsuzuki, writer, editor and maverick designer, is Japan's great chronicler of the strange and exotic
421: Arnie, get your gun
Action star Arnold Schwarzenegger explains why the Sept 11 terror attacks won't change a thing in Hollywood
420: Plenty to Crowe about
Despite missing out on the Oscar for A Beautiful Mind, Russell Crowe is still very much in the spotlight
419: Piano man
George Winston has made a career playing instrumental music inspired by the American West
418: War plane
Heroes often emerge out of the blood and guts of chaos, say filmmaker Ridley Scott and his crew of Black Hawk Down
416: The sexplorers
Killing Me Softly director Chen Kiage and star Heather Graham talk titillation
415: Don't call us retro
Stereolab take tunes back to the future
414: Running "Rings" around the rest
The cast and crew of Lord of the Rings talk Oscar and samurai elves
412: Lynch pin
Composer Angelo Badalamenti on Mulholland Drive and working with its famed director
411: Duality
Architects Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham on the beauty of building in Tokyo
410: American Woman
Natalie Merchant on her life and music
409: There's nothing like a dame
Veterans Julie Andrews and Gary Marshall team up for the Princess Diaries
408: Caiya Kawasaki
has built her image on berating Japanese men, but it's all for a reason
407: The Skys the Limit
Vanilla Sky's Cruise, Cruz & Crowe on casual sex
406: The art of elegance
Veteran designer Takeo Nishida
404: Don't judge an ogre by its cover
Shrek producer Jeffrey Katzenberg
402: Teen angst
Crime and Punishment in suburbia director Rob Schmidt
401: Life's a party

Alan Cumming
400: In the Nic of time

Nicole Kidman high-kicks in Moulin Rouge
399:Memories

Memento's director Christopher Nolan
398:Positivity

American alt rockers 311 take a special interest in Japan
397:Evolution of an ex-Filer

David Duchovny explains why he went from the X-Files to Evolution
396: Rock Warrior

Former Clash frontman Joe Strummer
395: 2001's absurd odyssey

The Coen brothers pay tribute to classic American cinema
394: Jolie good time
Angelina Jolie kicks plenty of butt in Tomb Raider
393: Keeping up with the Jones
392: Ratner a man in a rush
Director Brett Ratner can't wait to film Rush Hour 3 in Tokyo
391: Far from the Madden crowd
Captain Corelli's Mandolin is more than a World War II love story ...
390: Wake-up call
NHK morning news anchor Toko Takeuchi is an early bird with a passion ...
389: Gallo's humor
Artist, filmmaker, actor, model, Vincent Gallo
388: Reaching for the universe
Misao Arauchi
387: Speak softly and carry a big kick
Actor Steven Seagal
386: Paper boy
Italian mime Ennio Marchetto
385: A sight for saur eyes
Jurassic Park III's Sam Neill
384: The planet that went ape
Visionary filmmaker Tim Burton
383: Digital Godfather
The father of ambient music, Brian Eno
382: Mission possible
TV personality Mari Christine
381: Bombs away
Long-awaited Pearl Harbor comes to Japan
380: Not so close encounter
Director Steven Spielberg
379: Sexy poets
Samantha Lang, director of The Monkey's Mask
378: Hogan's hero
Crocodile Dundee - Paul Hogan
377: Sumo do
British actress Charlotte Brittain
376: Mummy dearest
The Mummy Returns' Brendan Fraser
375: Animal magic
Independent movie auteur, Michael Di Jiacomo
374: Brief encounters
American Short Shorts Film Festival organizer, Tetsuya Besho
373: Porn free
Doug Wright, screenwriter of Quills
372: Virgin for life
Sir Richard Branson, founder and chairman of the Virgin Group
371: Don't call me babe
Bombshell Charlize Theron
370: Killer personality
American Psycho's Christian Bale
369: Sweet inspiration
French actress Juliette Binoche
368: Playing chicken
Nick Park and Peter Lord, the creators of Chicken Run
367: The bite stuff
"Tony" Hopkins in a PR stupor
366: Get focked
Meet the Parents' Ben Stiller
365: Age of Innocence
"Auteur" filmmaker Paul Cox
364: As the Crowe flies
Meg Ryan promotes her new movie
363: The hard cell
The down-low on J. Lo
362: Boy in the hood
Actor Masaya Kato
361: Bouncing back
Hollywood's queen of cool, Gwyneth Paltrow
359: Play that funky music
Catch up with Verbal from Japan's hip-hop group m-flo
358: A heartbreak hotel
Hotel Splendide director Terence Gross
357: Billy Elliot
Star Jamie Bell
354: In a tranquil mood
New age musician, Kitaro
351: Bah Humbug
Jim Carrey as The Grinch

ISSUES 349-
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