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Jamaica, Curacao and Honduras win in World Cup qualifying
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Pacific Islands leaders to back 'ocean of peace' at fraught summit
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South Korea sends plane to fetch detained workers from US
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Poland says 'hostile objects' downed in its airspace during Russian attack on Ukraine
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Nepal army patrols after deadly protests oust PM
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Salvaged shipwreck porcelain gets new life in Malaysia
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EU chief to defend Trump trade deal in parliament
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USA blank Japan while South Koreans draw Mexico in friendlies
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Top Japan start-up Sakana AI touts nature-inspired tech
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Australia to deploy fleet of underwater strike drones
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France set for disruption as new PM takes office
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Asian markets rally as new US jobs data fans rate cut hopes
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Jamaicans beat Trinidad and Tobago in World Cup qualifying
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Zendejas and Balogun lift USA over Japan 2-0 in friendly
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Australia approves chlamydia vaccine for koalas
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Lyles leads US medal charge in Tokyo, Kipyegon eyes fourth title
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Kidnapped academic Elizabeth Tsurkov released in Iraq
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'It was bananas': Colin Farrell shoots new movie in Macau casinos
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De Minaur says Australia ready to snap Davis Cup title drought
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Pacific Islands leaders kick off summit clouded by China tensions
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Obese surpass undernourished youths for first time, UN warns
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Presentation to Beaver Creek Precious Metals Summit
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Trump issues rare rebuke to Netanyahu over Qatar strikes
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Unconvincing France come from behind to edge Iceland in World Cup qualifying
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England thrash Serbia, Haaland stars in World Cup qualifying
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Sparkling England crush Serbia to ignite Tuchel's reign
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Portugal edge Hungary in World Cup qualifying thriller
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Trump issues rare rebuke to Netanyahu over Qatar strike
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First of five judges in Bolsonaro coup trial votes to convict

Directors should 'control' tech, not fear it: Scorsese
US cinema legend Martin Scorsese said Tuesday directors should harness technology to serve their "voice" rather than fearing it will kill their industry.
Scorsese, nominated for a record 10th time for a best director Oscar for "Killers of the Flower Moon", was speaking at the Berlin film festival where he is collecting an Honorary Golden Bear for lifetime achievement.
He told a packed press conference that he was upbeat about the future of big-screen entertainment, even with small-screen diversions on the march.
"I don't think it's dying at all -- no, I think it's transforming," he said when asked about the future of film. "It never was meant to be one thing."
Scorsese, 81, said the movie-going of his youth had given way to a world of new possibilities that didn't have to be threatening.
"If you wanted to see a movie, you went to a theatre -- a good theatre or bad theatre but it was a theatre, it was always a communal experience," he said.
Scorsese said with entertainment technology now changing "so exhaustively and rapidly", "the only thing they (filmmakers) could really hold onto is the individual voice".
The "Taxi Driver" director, whose playful videos with his daughter Francesca have made him a social media star for a new generation, said the medium was far less important than the spark of imagination.
"The individual voice can express itself on TikTok or express itself in a four-hour film or two-hour miniseries," he said.
"What I'm getting at is that I don't think we should let the technology scare us. I think you don't become a slave to the technology," he said.
"Let us control the technology and put it in the right direction -- the right direction being from the individual voice rather than something which is just consumed and tossed away."
- 'Like Beethoven symphonies' -
Scorsese, one of the most prolific film preservationists in the industry, recommended returning again and again to great works.
"Maybe if you see the film 30 years later, the film has changed and in actuality, the film's the same but you've changed," he said.
"And so somehow you might be able to grow with the films like listening to Beethoven symphonies -- they change every time, they really do."
Asked about his favourite recent movies, Scorsese singled out fellow Oscar nominees "Past Lives" by Celine Song and Wim Wenders's "Perfect Days".
Scorsese said as soon as the campaign for next month's Academy Awards winds down he will focus on an upcoming project which returns one of his recurring themes: his Catholic faith.
He said he had met Pope Francis on a few occasions and discussed with him "fresher ways of thinking about the essentials of Christianity".
Scorsese said he hoped the film would turn out to be "unique and different" as well as "thought-provoking but also entertaining".
The Berlin film festival runs until Sunday.
A.Mahlangu--AMWN