US – Sunday, July 5
The week's releases
Metro staff reviews the latest CDs, DVDs and books for your reading pleasure.
 
The gangster of Hollywood
FEATURE. Johnny Depp doesn’t know what time it is. Though he technically calls an adorable village in France home and owns an island in the Caribbean, the mercurial actor spends so much time working that his internal clock is all out of whack.
 
 
Directorial debut is a shot at the ‘Moon’
INTERVIEW. When directors are limited to a $5 million budget and a 33-day shooting schedule, they usually won’t do anything too arduous — especially for their first films. But director Duncan Jones, 37, tells us that he “wanted to do something with ambition” for his debut flick. So instead, Jones, who is the son of David Bowie, decided to make the sci-fi adventure “Moon,” which opens Friday. The affable Brit explains how.
 
The Beckhams’ island getaway
GOSSIP. According to the Sun, David Beckham is planning a trip to Necker Island, Richard Branson’s private island hideaway, to celebrate his 10th wedding anniversary with Victoria Beckham. And the best part? It only costs $51,000 a night to have the whole island to themselves.
 
Bale does light-lifting
 MOVIES. Christian Bale is more relaxed than usual, and with good reason. The heavy lifting in promoting his latest film, “Public Enemies,” falls to Johnny Depp. For once, the success or failure of the movie doesn’t rest on Bale’s shoulders. There’s no talk of on-set outbursts or franchise potential. And for that, he’s grateful — and cheerful.
 
Published 22:23, August the 17th, 2008
 

‘Give Peace’ a dance

All Yoko Ono is saying, is remix your idea of a revolution

Ono
 
Ono
 

 Yoko Ono laughs when we suggest that we need “Give Peace a Chance” more now than when it was originally recorded in 1969.

“Exactly,” she replies, the shortest answer she’ll give during our conversation, and leaves it at that. Perhaps this is reason enough for the release of “Give Peace a Chance (The Remixes),” a digital collection of eight remixes of the Plastic Ono Band protest anthem with Ono’s newly recorded spoken-word vocals. Though the commingling of protest anthem and block rockin’ beat may seem incongruous to some, for Ono it’s a completely natural method to get the message to the masses. “If you want to get through to somebody, you go to their stomach with your soup,” she says. “[The remixes] are like soup. People give in to their bodies; their bodies will know what’s

important.”
Ono, 75, has led an unprecedented lifelong career as a visual, conceptual and musical artist of the avant-garde, a fact overshadowed by her marriage to John Lennon. In the late ’60s, Ono and Lennon spearheaded a number of peace rallies and Bed-Ins, the second of which, in 1969 in Montreal, produced the original recording of “Give Peace a Chance.”

Ono herself seems surprised by the song’s lasting impact, not to mention the remix project’s recent topping of Billboard’s Hot Dance Club Play charts.

“We just did whatever we could and never looked back,” she says of her musical and activist collaborations with Lennon. “At the time, the Bed-In was the most important thing we were doing.”

All of Ono’s pursuits, from music to activism to art, are manifestations of this sort of in-the-moment sensibility.
When talk turns to Ono’s art, she describes how each piece divines a path to pragmatism, or will the means of reality to an idealistic end: how “Sky TV,” a television that displays a real-time image of the sky via a camera installed on the roof, was a “practical thing,” prompted by her apartment’s blasé view of the building next door; how “Telephone Piece,” a phone placed in a gallery that Ono would occasionally call and speak to whomever picked up the receiver, was conceived “so that people could communicate directly, rather than just [passively] walk through.” The remixes of “Give Peace a Chance” are no different — they plant the ideas of social change in an otherwise innocuous social situation.

“It’s part of my life,” Ono says of her art, and, inescapably, a part of those whose lives intersect with it.