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‘Mr. Church’: One of the finest films of the year

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'Mr. Church'Film: “Mr. Church”; Cast: Eddie Murphy and Britt Robertson; Director: Bruce Beresford; Rating: ****

Having spent a lifetime and an evening together, at the end of this enormously heartwarming and fulfilling cinematic experience, Eddie Murphy who plays the title role with spectacularly subtle skill, is told by the film’s young protagonist that she will now give him his privacy for the evening.

“I don’t want my privacy,” replies Murphy, repudiating a lack of company in his final hour, his eyes pleading with the fear of impending mortality.

It’s the moment that defines the relationship between cinema and the audience, the dread we feel when a masterpiece nears its completion.

Death plays a very important part in Beresford’s latest grossly underrated film about friendship between unlikely people in a culturally dynamic society.

When Henry Church (Eddie Murphy) enters Charlie’s home, she is a small inquisitive girl whose mother is dying of cancer. Charlie doesn’t know it, though.

The sudden appearance of a tall black stranger in the house triggers off waves of hostility, suspicion and aggression in little Charlie who at first refuses to experience Mr. Church’s culinary skills and then refuses to let him know she loves the food.

From the start, this deeply moving film pulls you gently into the tender dynamics of domesticity and how an extraneous presence brings in its wake a lifetime of changes, all for the better, Beresford’s elegiac film — based on Susan McMartin’s first-person account — is the cinematic equivalent of pale yellow leaves dropping off a huge magnificent tree during autumn.

Sometimes in life, death is a beginning and a renewal. Mr. Church reinforces the exquisite truisms of life without getting preachy, shrill or self-righteous in tone. It is melancholic and meditative but never cumbersome or depressing for the audience.

Though it is an extremely virtuous film, almost to the point of blanking out all negativity, this is a film that never allows us to forget how close lives are to catastrophe even as it offers the comfort of a warm cosy family life where a mysterious and multi-faceted black man shares a cosy roof with a white American girl and her little daughter.

Idyllic scenes of shared meals in the kitchen and laughter in the living room mingles with the disturbing ring-tone of tragic forebodings that are never far away from the films’s gleaming spotless surface.

The director is no stranger to cross-cultural dynamics. In his most well-known work “Driving Miss Daisy”, a black chauffeur (Morgan Freeman) taught lessons of life to his upper-class white employee (Jessica Tandy).

In “Mr. Church”, the colour of Eddie Murphy’s skin is never brought up. Remarks on race are remarkably dodged and dismissed. It is as though the world inhabited by the film’s arcadian characters does not accept the preponderance of discrimination and segregation. Seldom in today’s cinema do we see a world so denuded of darkness.

The surprise is not that Besreford’s film paints the remotest corner of his canvas with sunshine. The real surprise is how skillfully and fluently Eddie Murphy has gone from his roguish cheesy roles in his youth to playing a man who is erudite, literate, wise, sensitive and humane, all of this without losing that twinkle in the eye.

Britt Robertson and little Natalie Coughlin, who play Charlie, are also dazzling in their deep kinship to the mission of walking on sunshine. And Natascha McElhone as Charelie’s dying mother reminded of Meryl Streep’s tragic grandeur in “Sophie’s Choice”.

There are moment of sublimity and splendour dotting the shimmering skyline of this miniature masterpiece. During a year when big screen spectacles have invaded the cinematic space, “Mr. Church” shows us how Billy Wilder’s style of humanistic cinema can still overpower Quentin Tarantino’s violent cynicism.

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Casino Days Reveal Internal Data on Most Popular Smartphones

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CasinoDays India

International online casino Casino Days has published a report sharing their internal data on what types and brands of devices are used to play on the platform by users from the South Asian region.

Such aggregate data analyses allow the operator to optimise their website for the brands and models of devices people are actually using.

The insights gained through the research also help Casino Days tailor their services based on the better understanding of their clients and their needs.

Desktops and Tablets Lose the Battle vs Mobile

The primary data samples analysed by Casino Days reveal that mobile connections dominate the market in South Asia and are responsible for a whopping 96.6% of gaming sessions, while computers and tablets have negligible shares of 2.9% and 0.5% respectively.

CasinoDays India

The authors of the study point out that historically, playing online casino was exclusively done on computers, and attribute thе major shift to mobile that has unfolded over time to the wide spread of cheaper smartphones and mobile data plans in South Asia.

“Some of the reasons behind this massive difference in device type are affordability, technical advantages, as well as cheaper and more obtainable internet plans for mobiles than those for computers,” the researchers comment.

Xiaomi and Vivo Outperform Samsung, Apple Way Down in Rankings

Chinese brands Xiaomi and Vivo were used by 21.9% and 20.79% of Casino Days players from South Asia respectively, and together with the positioned in third place with a 18.1% share South Korean brand Samsung dominate the market among real money gamers in the region.

 

CasinoDays India

Cupertino, California-based Apple is way down in seventh with a user share of just 2.29%, overshadowed by Chinese brands Realme (11.43%), OPPO (11.23%), and OnePlus (4.07%).

Huawei is at the very bottom of the chart with a tiny share just below the single percent mark, trailing behind mobile devices by Motorola, Google, and Infinix.

The data on actual phone usage provided by Casino Days, even though limited to the gaming parts of the population of South Asia, paints a different picture from global statistics on smartphone shipments by vendors.

Apple and Samsung have been sharing the worldwide lead for over a decade, while current regional leader Xiaomi secured their third position globally just a couple of years ago.

Striking Android Dominance among South Asian Real Money Gaming Communities

The shifted market share patterns of the world’s top smartphone brands in South Asia observed by the Casino Days research paper reveal a striking dominance of Android devices at the expense of iOS-powered phones.

On the global level, Android enjoys a comfortable lead with a sizable 68.79% share which grows to nearly 79% when we look at the whole continent of Asia. The data on South Asian real money gaming communities suggests that Android’s dominance grows even higher and is north of the 90% mark.

Among the major factors behind these figures, the authors of the study point to the relative affordability of and greater availability of Android devices in the region, especially when manufactured locally in countries like India and Vietnam.

“And, with influencers and tech reviews putting emphasis on Android devices, the choice of mobile phone brand and OS becomes easy; Android has a much wider range of products and caters to the Asian online casino market in ways that Apple can’t due to technical limitations,” the researchers add.

The far better integration achieved by Google Pay compared to its counterpart Apple Pay has also played a crucial role in shaping the existing smartphone market trends.

 

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