-
'No winner': Kosovo snap poll unlikely to end damaging deadlock
-
Culture being strangled by Kosovo's political crisis
-
Main contenders in Kosovo's snap election
-
Australia all out for 152 as England take charge of 4th Ashes Test
-
Boys recount 'torment' at hands of armed rebels in DR Congo
-
Inside Chernobyl, Ukraine scrambles to repair radiation shield
-
Bondi victims honoured as Sydney-Hobart race sets sail
-
North Korea's Kim orders factories to make more missiles in 2026
-
Palladino's Atalanta on the up as Serie A leaders Inter visit
-
Hooked on the claw: how crane games conquered Japan's arcades
-
Shanghai's elderly waltz back to the past at lunchtime dance halls
-
Japan govt approves record 122 trillion yen budget
-
US launches Christmas Day strikes on IS targets in Nigeria
-
Australia reeling on 72-4 at lunch as England strike in 4th Ashes Test
-
Too hot to handle? Searing heat looming over 2026 World Cup
-
Packers clinch NFL playoff spot as Lions lose to Vikings
-
Guinea's presidential candidates hold final rallies before Sunday's vote
-
BondwithPet Expands B2B Offering with Custom Pet Memorial Product
-
Best Crypto IRA Companies (Rankings Released)
-
Eon Prime Intelligent Alliance Office Unveils New Brand Identity and Completes Website Upgrade
-
Villa face Chelsea test as Premier League title race heats up
-
Spurs extend domination of NBA-best Thunder
-
Malaysia's Najib to face verdict in mega 1MDB graft trial
-
King Charles calls for 'reconciliation' in Christmas speech
-
Brazil's jailed ex-president Bolsonaro undergoes 'successful' surgery
-
UK tech campaigner sues Trump administration over US sanctions
-
New Anglican leader says immigration debate dividing UK
-
Russia says made 'proposal' to France over jailed researcher
-
Bangladesh PM hopeful Rahman returns from exile ahead of polls
-
Police suspect suicide bomber behind Nigeria's deadly mosque blast
-
AFCON organisers allowing fans in for free to fill empty stands: source
-
Mali coach Saintfiet hits out at European clubs, FIFA over AFCON changes
-
Last Christians gather in ruins of Turkey's quake-hit Antakya
-
Pope Leo condemns 'open wounds' of war in first Christmas homily
-
Mogadishu votes in first local elections in decades under tight security
-
'Starting anew': Indonesians in disaster-struck Sumatra hold Christmas mass
-
Cambodian PM's wife attends funerals of soldiers killed in Thai border clashes
-
Prime minister hopeful Tarique Rahman arrives in Bangladesh: party
-
Pacific archipelago Palau agrees to take migrants from US
-
Pope Leo expected to call for peace during first Christmas blessing
-
Australia opts for all-pace attack in fourth Ashes Test
-
'We hold onto one another and keep fighting,' says wife of jailed Istanbul mayor
-
North Korea's Kim visits nuclear subs as Putin hails 'invincible' bond
-
Trump takes Christmas Eve shot at 'radical left scum'
-
3 Factors That Affect the Cost of Dentures in San Antonio, TX
-
Leo XIV celebrates first Christmas as pope
-
Diallo and Mahrez strike at AFCON as Ivory Coast, Algeria win
-
'At your service!' Nasry Asfura becomes Honduran president-elect
-
Trump-backed Nasry Asfura declared winner of Honduras presidency
-
Diallo strikes to give AFCON holders Ivory Coast winning start
McConaughey unveils 'urgent' California fire film 'The Lost Bus'
For Hollywood stars Matthew McConaughey and Jamie Lee Curtis, making an action film about the deadliest wildfire in California history hits close to home.
"The Lost Bus" tells the harrowing true story of a school bus driver who risked his life to save 22 children from the inferno that destroyed the town of Paradise in 2018.
The movie's world premiere Friday at the Toronto International Film Festival comes as Los Angeles rebuilds from yet more deadly blazes in the fire-wracked western US state, images of which shocked the world again in January.
McConaughey, who resided for years in repeatedly fire-hit Malibu, said depicting such topical and real events is an extra "responsibility and honor."
"This is going to be a huge-action, urgent, epic-scope, fire-is-a-predator film, like it hasn't been seen on film before. And it's going to be a deeply personal story."
Curtis -- who helped shepherd the film to the big screen and is a producer -- lives in the neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, which was obliterated by this year's fire.
Though her house survived, it was severely damaged and she has only just been able to move back home.
"A week ago, we moved in, before I came here," she told AFP ahead of the premiere.
"It's a difficult film for people to watch if they've lived or live with the threat of fire."
- 'Global warming' -
McConaughey plays Kevin McKay, a reluctant and flawed hero who volunteered to collect stranded schoolchildren even as he feared for his own family in the flames encroaching on his hometown Paradise.
The film is paced like an action thriller, and actors performed most scenes in front of real flames. The roaring fire and sparking power lines add an element of horror, particularly as the specter of death is all too real.
Ultimately, 85 people died in the Camp Fire.
Curtis decided to turn McKay's story into a film after reading journalist Lizzie Johnson's book "Paradise: One Town's Struggle to Survive an American Wildfire."
She sent the book to fellow producer Jason Blum, telling him "this will be the most important thing either one of us do in the movie business in our life."
While McConaughey and Curtis -- both Oscar winners -- insist the film is "not political," it contains a moment in which a firefighting chief tells journalists that, with fires becoming more frequent and deadly, "we're being damn fools."
"The word 'global warming' doesn't enter the movie," said Curtis. "It's a movie about a school bus driver and a teacher."
"But the reality is, it's happening over and over and over again, and what is the common link? The common link is obvious."
- 'Hero or not?' -
For McConaughey, "there's some facts that pop through" in the film, which cast several real firefighters and emergency dispatchers from the Camp Fire to play themselves.
"This company, they did end up paying quite a bit of money on this particular fire," he notes.
Utility company PG&E, whose power lines were blamed for sparking the fire, paid more than $13 billion to victims and pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter.
The film hits theaters September 19, and premieres on Apple TV+ next month.
It is McConaughey's first movie in six years -- an absence during which he explored politics, even mulling a run for Texas governor that has not yet materialized.
Instead he "got the writer's bug," penning a best-selling memoir, and has a new book of poetry due out this month.
"Any time well spent with another vocation, or creating some kind of art or hanging out with my family, you mature as an actor when you come back to the screen," he said.
He was lured back for "The Lost Bus" by director Paul Greengrass, who has previously dramatized real-life pirate kidnappings ("Captain Phillips") and terror attacks ("United 93.")
McConaughey met up with the real-life McKay, and said the whole experience had caused him to ponder "the long-standing definition of what the heck's a hero or not?"
"I don't know. But there definitely seems to be a heroic act, to go towards a crisis instead of from it," he said.
Y.Aukaiv--AMWN