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Traore backs 'hungry' Italy against France in Six Nations
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All-rounder Curran brings stuttering England to life at the death
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South Korea court weighs death sentence for ex-president Yoon
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Tech chiefs address India AI summit as Gates cancels
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Australia rejects foreign threats after claim of China interference
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Somali militias terrorise locals after driving out Al-Qaeda
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Peru picks Balcazar as interim president, eighth leader in a decade
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Australian defence firm helps Ukraine zap Russian drones
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General strike to protest Milei's labor reforms starts in Argentina
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Cuban opposition figure Ferrer supports Maduro-like US operation for Cuba
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High-stakes showdown in Nepal's post-uprising polls
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Asian markets rally after Wall St tech-led gains
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After Greenland, Arctic island Svalbard wary of great powers
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Veteran Slipper set for new Super Rugby landmark
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Sudan's historic acacia forest devastated as war fuels logging
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Deadly Indonesia floods force a deforestation reckoning
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Australia vow to entertain in bid for Women's Asian Cup glory
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Afghan barbers under pressure as morality police take on short beards
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Jail, disgrace and death: the dark fates of South Korean leaders
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S. Korea court weighs death sentence for ex-president Yoon
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MotoGP dumps Phillip Island for Adelaide street circuit
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Trump kicks off his 'Board of Peace,' with eye on Gaza and beyond
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Walmart results expected to highlight big plans for AI
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Australia Olympic TV reporter apologises after slurring words
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USA and Canada on course to meet for Olympic men's ice hockey gold
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Bodo/Glimt stun Inter, Gordon hits four in Newcastle Champions League romp
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Arteta urges Arsenal to 'stand up' after title bid rocked by Wolves draw
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McIlroy aims to eliminate 'big numbers' in pursuit of first Riviera title
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PM Modi, top tech bosses to address India AI summit
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Bad Bunny to star in movie about Puerto Rico
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Arsenal blow two-goal lead in damaging Wolves draw
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Habib Beye appointed coach of Marseille
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Sloppy Atletico held in six-goal Brugge thriller
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Schick steers Leverkusen past Olympiacos in Champions League
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Hogh stars as Bodo/Glimt down Inter in Champions League
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Oil prices jump on toughening US posture on Iran as US stocks advance
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Gu's exchange with AFP at Winter Olympics goes viral
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Hamilton feeling 'connected' to new Ferrari car at test sessions
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US lingerie magnate says was 'conned' by Epstein
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Marner fires Canada into Olympic ice hockey semis, as Finland survive
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Israel conducting 'gradual de facto annexation' of W.Bank: UN official
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Alcaraz, Sinner cruise into Qatar Open quarter-finals
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Mavs confirm Irving will miss rest of NBA season
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Environmental groups sue Trump administration over scrapped climate rule
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Major US naval, air buildup sets stage for potential Iran war
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White House tells Iran to do deal as Trump hints at US strikes
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Gordon scores four as Newcastle hit Qarabag for six
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French far-right leader accuses Macron, allies of strengthening hard-left after activist killed
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Putin says Russia 'always' stands by Cuba, slams US sanctions
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England's Joe Heyes says Princess Anne mistook him for Joe Marler
Russell Crowe shaken by Nazi role in festival hit 'Nuremberg'
Russell Crowe's nerve-shredding portrayal of a notorious Nazi on trial and Angelina Jolie's deeply personal dive into the world of French fashion led a busy Sunday of world premieres at the Toronto film festival.
Crowe's depiction of the second-ranking Nazi, Hermann Goering, in "Nuremberg," as he plays a cat-and-mouse game with a psychiatrist (Rami Malek), drew an unusually lengthy standing ovation at North America's biggest movie fest.
The movie, out in theaters in November and based on Jack El-Hai's book "The Nazi and the Psychiatrist," depicts Goering as a charming, smart and wily prisoner, while not shying away from the colossal evil in which he played a pivotal role.
"You can't play a character like this and not walk away, at the end of the day, feeling things that maybe shake you about what went down," Crowe told journalists on the world premiere's red carpet.
Crowe speaks German in parts of the film, depicting how Goering believed he could use the post-World War II Nuremberg trials to justify his actions on a global stage.
The Oscar-winner signed up just after reading the script, in which he could see Goering's "ambition bloom" and "how his egotism told him that he could control the narrative."
The movie contains devastating archive footage of Nazi concentration camp victims being bulldozed into their graves -- the same film reel that was shown in the real Nuremberg courtroom.
Director James Vanderbilt said he asked his actors not to research the footage before they were confronted with it on the day the scene was filmed.
Crowe's role was "a dark person to play -- that takes an emotional toll on an actor," Vanderbilt told AFP.
"He was game for all of it, and I'm eternally grateful to him for that."
In an early review, Deadline called the movie "unrelenting" and "enormously effective," praising Crowe's "stunning" performance.
- 'Stitches' -
Elsewhere at Toronto on Sunday, Angelina Jolie premiered "Couture," a drama focusing on some of the human stories behind the often superficial world of fashion.
Set in Paris and coming from French director Alice Winocour, it follows an American filmmaker who is diagnosed with cancer as she prepares for a runway show, and told she needs a double mastectomy -- echoing Jolie's real-life health issues.
"It's about couture -- in French, it means stitches," the actress told AFP.
"So stitches, when you think of our surgeries, our bodies, the way our lives and stories are sewn together, you understand what the film is."
The film does not yet have a release date.
Meanwhile, Oscar-winning director Chloe Zhao walked the red carpet for "Hamnet," which colors in the gaps of the little we know about William Shakespeare and his wife, and a tragedy that inspired arguably his greatest work.
"To see them fall in love and come together, be torn apart... it's an inner civil war that we all battle with as we grow and mature," she told AFP.
The movie, starring Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley, hits theaters in November and is expected to be an Academy Awards contender.
And at a Toronto press conference, stripper-turned-actor Channing Tatum said his performance in "Roofman," which tells the true story of a man who robbed dozens of McDonald's and hid out in a toy store, had helped him overcome "imposter syndrome."
The film, out next month, recounts the life of Jeffrey Manchester, who robbed dozens of fast food stores through the 1990s, entering the restaurants through the roof.
He famously built a secret hideout inside a Toys "R" Us store in the city of Charlotte, coming out after closure at night to wash in the bathroom, surviving largely on snack food like M&Ms.
"For the very first time, maybe even on this movie, I feel like I've actually earned my seat at the table" with the role, Tatum said.
The Toronto International Film Festival runs until next Sunday.
J.Williams--AMWN