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7:16pm Friday 5th September 2008
Mickey Rourke's new film role as a lonely has-been wrestler has taken the Venice Film Festival by storm.
Those behind The Wrestler received a standing ovation from some reporters during the US film's press conference, as parallels were drawn with Rourke's own troubled past.
Much mention has been made of a lack of a Hollywood presence at this year's festival.
But as the event draws to a close, excitement mounted as Rourke was tipped to scoop "best actor" awards.
Rourke plays Randy "The Ram" Robinson, who has a blossoming romance with an ageing stripper, played by Marisa Tomei.
In the 1980s, Randy was a headlining professional wrestler, but 20 years later he ekes out a living performing in gyms and community centres around New Jersey.
The film, darkly comical in parts, shows Randy strive to keep up his image, getting his hair roots bleached and topping up his tan, as well as the violently imaginative props used among the wrestlers, including barbed wire and even a staple gun.
Estranged from his daughter (Evan Rachel Wood), a heart attack forces him into retirement. But the lure of wrestling threatens to draw him back in as he struggles to come to terms with everyday life, working on a delicatessen counter, his blond tresses beneath a hair net.
Describing his character, Rourke said: "There is no worse feeling to be feeling shameful all the time... and usually you're to blame for it.
"You have nobody to blame but yourself. The Ram is a mess."
Q. I am looking for a small table that can be mounted on the wall and folds down when not in use.
DRUNKENNESS seems to be the main driving force behind Harold Pinter’s classic 1974 play No Man’s Land.
He may have made the successful transition from Slough to Hollywood, but you won't catch Ricky Gervais losing his head over fame and fortune. As he makes his first lead debut in Ghost Town, the British funnyman reveals why he plans to stay grounded.
Henry Hobson runs a successful bootmaker's shop in nineteenth-century Salford.
questions@thehousedirectory.com HTML color chart Halloween falls in half term this year and it promises to be one of the biggest scarefests yet. JAMES MURPHY finds the best places to go
Walthamstow’s photographic society, founded in 1894, isn’t just one of the oldest in the country, it’s also one of the most successful. Its free annual exhibition is on this week at St Mary's Welcome Centre in Walthamstow village: weekday evenings and all day Saturday 1 November.
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