Venus Optics has released a new ultra-wide angle lens, the Laowa 6mm f/2 Zero-D MFT, for cameras with Micro Four Thirds format sensors.
The new Laowa 6mm f/2 Zero-D MFTlens shown on a Panasonic Lumix M4/3 camera. (Source: Venus Optics.)
Developed as a ‘photo’ version of the company’s previously released 6mm T2.1 Cine lens, the new 6mm f/2 Zero-D MFT lens comes with electrical contacts that allow users to control the aperture through the camera body and record EXIF metadata in image files. Weighing only 188 grams, this lens can capture an angle of view of 121.9 degrees with close-to-zero distortion, making it ideal for landscape, astrophotography, architectural or drone shots. The optical design of this lens contains 13 elements in nine groups and includes two aspherical elements for controlling distortion. Its fast f/2 maximum aperture provides flexibility for shooting in dim lighting and controlling depth of field.
The minimum focus of 9 cm allows photographers to shoot close-ups with visual impact, while the five aperture blades can produce 10-pointed sunstars when the aperture is stopped down. A focus magnifier is provided to enable fine tuning of focus when rotating the focus ring. This lens accepts 58 mm diameter screw-in filters. It is currently available to purchase via Venus Optics official website (http://www.venuslens.net/) and authorised dealers for an MSRP of US$499. Click here to visit the product page.
Shrewsbury School of Photography kicks off the new term next week with evening classes on Tuesday, January 11, at Belvidere School.
Programme leader, Richard Bishop said: “Our classes are ideal for those new to digital SLR photography, or who have used their camera for some time but would like to learn the basics from the beginning.
“Photography is often made out to be more complicated than it really need be. It is often masked in misleading mythology and if you are wondering how you would cope on a photography course we have the perfect solution.
“Students will get the technical know-how from the outset to start making the most of their digital cameras, whilst developing a creative approach to photography.”
James Russell from the Outdoor Depot, Church Stretton said: “If you’re having trouble understanding your F Stops from your Apertures and your ISO’s from your white balance this is the perfect solution.”
Mr Bishop added: “Anyone can enrol on the courses. Don’t worry if you are a complete beginner; we assume nothing in advance. All you need is the desire to discover, interact and respond to the theoretical and practical input of the sessions.”
“We will also be resuming one day courses in Shrewsbury town centre soon.”
For information contact Richard on 07710 416857 or visit www.shrewsburyschoolofphotography.co.uk
It would be quite the understatement to say 2022 has been a difficult year, and whether or not 2023 will be any better is uncertain. That said, the more doom and gloom there is out there, the more important it is to look for the glimmers of hope and seek out the shreds of joy.
“We face lots of big challenges in our lives and in our society – we always have done and we always will,” says Mark Williamson, director of the non-profit organisation Action for Happiness. “So it’s vital that we find ways to stay resilient, take positive steps forward and look for solutions. The key is to be a ‘realistic optimist’: we see the world as it is, but we choose to focus more on what’s good.
“This isn’t about being naively positive, it’s a gritty and grounded response to an imperfect world. And by choosing this form of ‘active hope’, we not only become happier ourselves, but we’re also more likely to respond in helpful ways and contribute to a brighter future.”
With that in mind, we’ve gathered 50 reasons to feel optimistic about the year ahead. As Williamson puts it: “All around us there are signs of hope and things to be grateful for – we just need to look for them.”
Arts Council England is funding its broadest range of culture
The 990 organisations Arts Council England will fund between 2023-2026 is incredibly significant. “It is the broadest range of organisations we’ve ever funded, and we’ve focussed on achieving a fairer spread of investment across the country,” says chief executive Darren Henley. “This includes world-renowned institutions, like the Royal Shakespeare Company, as well as those receiving funding for the first time, like the Blackpool Illuminations and National Football Museum in Manchester.”
We have our first People’s Plan for Nature
“It gives me huge encouragement that, right now, 100 citizens from across the country, and from all walks of life, are deliberating and discussing how we bring wildlife back to our shores as part of the UK’s first ever People’s Assembly for Nature,” says Harry Bowell, director of land and nature at the National Trust. “In March, the assembly will publish a set of recommendations on behalf of the UK public – a significant moment for citizen action and for the restoration of our natural world.”
Wind energy will gather speed
“The rate of green innovation has been incredible over the past few years and is set to continue,” says Areeba Hamid, co-executive director of Greenpeace UK. “The UK has the highest wind energy potential in Europe, and wind already generates nearly a quarter of the UK’s electricity. With the onshore ban finally set to end and a strong offshore wind rollout taking place, we are seeing renewables become ever more fundamental to our energy mix.”
Thousands will get better access to clean water
Hannah Bellemy, UK director at charity: water, is excited about the difference new technology will make next year. “We’ve developed a new water sensor that will help people living in remote, rural communities across the Global South have long-term, reliable access to clean water,” she says. “Following a successful pilot, in 2023 we’re going to install this technology for thousands of people.”
The English Coastal Path will be completed
Over the past few years, Natural England has been busy working on creating a coastal path that stretches the entire length of England. At 2,795 miles, it will be the world’s longest continuous hiking path when it is completed this year.
Climate Trace will help track emissions
“There are researchers taking steps to face the challenges of climate change head on, and 2023 will see many of these new innovations come to light,” says sustainability expert and UCL lecturer Renuka Thakore. “For instance, Climate Trace, an independent greenhouse gas emissions tracking system, will create the world’s first emissions inventory based primarily on direct, independent observation. This system will fill the critical knowledge gaps for all decision-makers and allow a coherent improvement in planning carbon reduction.”
Landscape restoration will expand
The counties along the Welsh-English borders – Radnorshire, Shropshire and Herefordshire – plan to be a lot wilder in 2023. The Wildlife Trusts in these counties will be restoring and connecting woodlands by rewilding river valleys and working with farmers to put wildlife back onto their farms.
Eurovision comes to the UK
After decades of the dreaded “null points”, it seemed unlikely the UK would ever host Eurovision again. And yet, thanks to the success of Sam Ryder and on behalf of Ukraine, the song contest will light up Liverpool in May.
Our happiness is making a recovery
“The nation’s happiness saw a really sharp downturn during the pandemic, but the latest wellbeing data from the Office for National Statistics shows that we’re now seeing levels of happiness rising again,” says Williamson. “One of the big ‘silver linings’ from the pandemic is that more people than ever are now comfortable talking about mental health and wellbeing. This trend will not only grow in 2023, it will also connect with vital conversations about social change and building a better society.”
Rail is making its revival
There is a boom in travelling by train, which is only expected to gather steam in 2023. In fact, Europe’s network of sleeper trains will grow over the course of the year: Austria’s Nightjet – complete with wireless charging points and ensuite bathrooms – is one of the exciting debuts to look out for.
It will be a great year in film
La La Land director Damien Chazelle returns with an epic (three-hour) period film, Babylon. Dune is getting a sequel. After a long time in the making, Greta Gerwig’s Barbie arrives in summer. Alice Walker’s seminal novel The Colour Purple is getting a musical adaptation. Wonka, from Bafta-award winning director of Paddington Paul King and starring Timothee Chalamet, arrives in December. Disney’s Ariel, starring Halle Bailey, will make plenty of waves.
And an excellent one for TV
Meanwhile, in television, new series of smash-hit shows on the way in 2023 include: Netflix’s Squid Game, HBO’s Succession, Netflix’s Heartstopper and ITV’s Unforgotten. BBC are also bringing back Waterloo Road, and Netflix are gifting us a Bridgerton spin-off, Queen Charlotte.
Doctor Who marks 60 years
In 2023 we will also see the celebration of the 60th anniversary year of Doctor Who. With much-lauded showrunner Russell T Davies back at the reins, Ncuti Gatwa playing the new generation Time Lord, and a return of David Tennant, fans are somewhat excited.
Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer will launch…
One of the highly anticipated space moments of 2023 is when the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer launches in April. “The spacecraft will carry out mission studies to Jupiter’s moons and will reach Jupiter in July 2031 after eight years of travel,” says Dr Atma Prakash, senior lecturer in aerospace engineering at Teesside University. “It will eventually enter the orbit around Ganymede moon for its close-up mission, becoming the first spacecraft to orbit a moon other than our own.”
…as will Psyche’s mission
“Another exciting plan is the Psyche mission, which is scheduled to launch in October,” adds Dr Prakash. “This is the first mission to a unique metal-rich asteroid orbiting the Sun between Mars and Jupiter, which eventually could help in understanding the formation of our planet.”
Environment groups will continue to encourage change
“Undoubtedly there are huge environmental challenges ahead, but we also won a historic legal challenge that means the government is having to revise its net zero strategy to ensure the UK’s legally binding carbon budgets are met,” says Miriam Turner, co-executive director of Friends of the Earth. “This shows climate legislation has real teeth and can be enforced through our court system. The power of people to drive action on climate is limitless – and that’s giving us hope for 2023.”
FIFA Women’s World Cup is back
The Women’s World Cup is taking place in Australia and New Zealand in July, and after the Lionesses’ success at the Euros, everyone is thinking the same thing: could it be their year?
Electrification ramps up
The increase in electric vehicles is positive all round. “Making electric vehicles more accessible will ultimately help set the economy on course for green, sustainable growth, and help combat rising fuel prices,” says Frank Barrett, chief executive at sustainable specialist vehicle manufacturer company WN VTech. “This year, we can expect greater clarity around the infrastructure requirements for electrification, as well as new methods of funding. This will take things forward at a greater pace in 2023.”
The RSPB’s Big Garden Birdwatch is back
At the end of January, RSPB’s annual Big Garden Birdwatch will bring together bird lovers once more and help paint a vital picture of our feathered friends. “A small reminder about the everyday joy of connecting to the natural world, it’s a great barometer of the state of our most commonly seen nature and something everyone can get involved in,” says the charity’s chief executive Becky Spright.
Manchester is opening a long-awaited new arts venue
Manchester’s new £186m arts venue Factory International is opening at last. It will be the permanent home of the biennial Manchester International Festival, which begins in late June and will feature a stage adaptation of The Matrix and host the largest-ever immersive Yayoi Kusama exhibition.
30 Days Wild returns
One of the UK’s most popular nature challenges will be back in June. The Wildlife Trusts’ 30 Days Wild event inspires people across the UK to try one “random act of wildness” every day for 30 days, be it listening to birdsong or identifying a wildflower.
Tech will get even smarter
“In 2023, I think we’ll see an explosion in smart city tech and applications,” says Matt Lewis, commercial research director at NCC Group. “From smart traffic lights to manage congestion, to smart ride-sharing services to help cities become more sustainable, these smart advancements will transform the ways cities run.”
Brighton will get a new heated lido
Not everyone enjoys cold water swimming. Those who like their dips to be at least 25ºC, thank you very much, will be pleased to hear Brighton’s new beach-side 50m lido, opening in spring, is heated.
There could be a watershed moment in housing
The Centre for Ageing Better, along with partners in the Housing Made for Everyone coalition, have long campaigned for more accessible and adequate housing. “[This year] could herald a watershed moment, a moment where the pendulum swings and we begin to see homes built that meet the needs of people,” says deputy director Holly Holder. “The government has committed to raising minimum accessibility standards on all new homes – 2023 should be the year that this becomes enshrined in law and maybe even the year that change begins to take effect.”
Young V&A will open
Five years after it closed, London’s V&A Museum of Childhood is reopening in the summer as Young V&A. It promises to be unrecognisable, but even more fun for kids.
Creative Access will champion more under-represented talent
Under-represented and disabled talent will get greater access to careers and training support from employers this year, thanks to the work of Creative Access. In particular, they have received huge interest from organisations seeking to upskill to support disabled talent, and will be running a number of workshops to empower them to take action in 2023.
There’s a move towards nutrition in food industry
While the food and drink industry has faced huge challenges, industry expert Jane Milton feels there are some positive trends. “Consumers are seeking out healthier prepared foods and are opting for ‘better for you’ choices,” she says. “New brands that typify this are Good Things Snacks, and Apres Foods, a range of organic prepared meals that pivoted from being a restaurant in the pandemic.”
Holidays are on the up
Forty million British people are planning trips away this year, according to research from Booking.com, which is up 11 per cent from 2022.
Sydney hosts historic Pride celebrations
Sydney is hosting World Pride this year, which is the first time the event has taken place in the southern hemisphere – and marks the 50th anniversary of the first Australian Gay Pride Week.
There’s an independent retail boom
“In 2023, independent retailers have cause for optimism by harnessing a superpower that will help them succeed despite ongoing economic uncertainty: agility,” comments Olivier Buffon, head of international at the online wholesale marketplace Faire. “Smaller, community focused retailers are armed with more resilience because they are able to adapt to consumer demands and curate their supply in almost real time.”
National Galleries of Scotland will re-open
The main building of the National Galleries of Scotland in Edinburgh has been under construction for what feels like forever, but when it reopens to the public in the summer it will be worth it: think transformed exhibition spaces and lovely views over Princes Street Gardens.
The Mental Health Act is on the cusp of reform
“Even at a time when people are struggling with their mental health and the NHS is under increasing pressure, there’s still light on the horizon,” says Lucy Schonegevel, associate director for policy and practice at Rethink Mental Illness. “We’re on the cusp of reform of the Mental Health Act, with new legislation inching closer to becoming law. For the thousands of people who’ve campaigned for the archaic Mental Health Act to be overhauled, this is hugely significant.”
The circular economy grows
As we become increasingly aware of the environmental damage caused by our consumer-driven economy, the growing interest in the concept of a circular economy – with the likes of Vinted and Depop – is a light on the horizon. “The aim of the circular economy is to ensure that resources such as textiles, metals and plastics are reused over and over again rather than being thrown away,” says Geri Cupi, founder of Twig. “This prevents excess waste being sent to landfill and diminishes our need to rely on finite resources.”
Progress in immunotherapy will help tackle cancer
“The past few years has seen the emergence of powerful research technologies that are opening up a whole raft of treatment options,” says Dr Samuel Godfrey, research information lead at Cancer Research UK. “Immunotherapies offer a powerful tool that could complement chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery – and we have seen several recent headlines showing the success of these treatments. There are still some challenges, but I’m interested in some of the CRUK-funded work by Sergio Quezada at UCL who made a discovery that could increase the effectiveness of immunotherapy for many.”
Disney celebrates 100 years
The Walt Disney Company is celebrating its centenary with a number of highlights across the year, including UK-wide concerts, a documentary, and special events in each of its theme parks.
There will be better representation of disabled people both on and off screen
ScreenSkills are training access co-ordinators committed to improving representation and removing barriers in the TV and film. “While stereotypes and discrimination still proliferate, there is a shift, especially regarding neurodiversity,” says Professor Jason Lee, British Academy Innovation Fellow at De Montfort University. “This increase in awareness on and off screen and in equality in employment practices will progress in 2023, and have a knock-on impact, altering not just perceptions but reality.”
We have sports momentum to build on
“Who can forget the achievements of the wonderful Lionesses or the buzz across Birmingham and the West Midlands during the Commonwealth Games,” says Simon Morton, deputy chief executive at UK Sport. “Powered by National Lottery support, the UK hosted over a dozen major international sporting events across 25 towns and cities during 2022 in what proved to be a record-breaking year for sport. Given sport’s ability to unite communities, even in the most trying of circumstances, we have the opportunity to capitalise on this momentum as we enter the new year.”
Nextdoor Nature gets bigger and better
The Wildlife Trusts’ Nextdoor Nature project – a new way of bringing communities together to help nature flourish – will step up a gear in 2023 with a new digital platform to provide people with the advice and support they need to protect nature on their doorstep.
Race for Life celebrates 30 years
Cancer Research celebrates 30 years of Race for Life in 2023. It has raised more than £940m since the first event. “For the three decades, we’ve brought together people from across the country to run, walk or jog against cancer and as Race for Life enters its 30th year, we aim to make it the most impactful year yet,” says Clare Moore, director of Race for Life.
A new diabetes drug is looking positive
A new type of diabetes treatment might be on the horizon. “The glucagon-like peptide receptor agonist (GLP-1) drug, which has entered a third stage of clinical trial, is helping to improve insulin levels among those suffering from diabetes and control post-meal blood sugar level spikes,” says nutritionist Arina Kuzmina. “Another great benefit of this medication is that unlike any other, it needs to be injected once a week only, lowering the costs for those with diabetes. I am looking forward to seeing where 2023 will take this research to and I feel optimistic about the results.”
The Rugby World Cup is back
Four years after it was last held in Tokyo, the Rugby World Cup is coming back to Europe as France hosts the competition. After South Africa beat England in the final in 2019, the game is on.
There’s King Charles III’s coronation
You don’t have to be a monarchist to accept that the coronation of the King in May is undoubtedly a significant historical event, one that few generations get to witness. And it’s not every year we get an extra Bank Holiday.
Northumberland is getting a shrine to whisky
Come February, a new Anglo-Saxon Museum and English whisky distillery will open in Northumberland. Ad Gefrin is a long overdue celebration of the area’s 200-year history of distilling.
Showtown will open in Blackpool
Where better for the UK’s new museum of fun and entertainment than Blackpool? Described as “all singing and all dancing”, Showtown will be located right in the heart of things on the Prom and opens its doors later in 2023.
It is shaping up to be another stellar year for book lovers
Jessie Burton is blessing us with a sequel to the literary sensation that was The Miniaturist; Lorrie Moore is returning with her first novel in 14 years, If This Is Not My Home, and Margaret Atwood is publishing her first short story collection since 2014, Old Babes in the Wood. Other highly-anticipated books include: Colson Whitehead’s Crook Manifesto, Jojo Moyes’ Someone Else’s Shoes, and Salman Rushdie’s Victory City.
Flexible working will continue to rise
The huge success of this year’s four day working week trial (86 per cent of companies said they were likely to continue with the model) will pave the way for more flexible working practices in 2023.
Shakespeare’s wife is getting a hometown tribute
An adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s award-winning novel Hamnet is being staged in Stratford-upon-Avon, giving Shakespeare’s wife Anne Hathaway a starring role in the town where she lived.
The Jumanji theme park will be unveiled
Almost 30 years after Robin Williams’s famous fantasy film was first released, the UK is getting the world’s first Jumanji theme park. Opening in spring at Chessington World of Adventures, it will span 128 acres.
Leeds has its Year of Culture
After its bid to be named the European Capital of Culture 2023 was derailed due to Brexit, Leeds has decided to host its own Year of Culture so that the hard work and £1m already spent wouldn’t go to waste. Events will celebrate everything from the city’s art to pop, design to sport.
There’s progress in early cancer detection
“Diagnosing cancer early, when it’s more treatable, is one of the best ways to improve survival,” says Dr Samuel Godfrey. “There are big opportunities therefore in the early detection space, including trials for blood tests like the Galleri test and trials of simple technology like the cytosponge. Anything that can shift the stage of diagnosis of a cancer will save lives, and I think the next couple of years will be big for this field.”
The vividness and clarity of January’s night skies are enough to make a skywatcher forget the cold long enough to take exploratory plunges into reinvigorating celestial sights.
When you’re outside around 8 p.m. on any clear night, it’s practically impossible to miss the three star belt of Constellation Orion, the enormous hunter, looming in the southern sky. The constellation reaches its highest point for the year (culminates) when its center strikes the north/south meridian at 9 p.m. Jan. 25, putting it in the year’s best viewing position for everything from a naked eye to high-powered astrophotography telescopes.
The eight bright stars that define the asterism are mostly young, blue or blue-white supergiants either flying solo or as multiple star systems ranging from 244 to 2,000 light years distant. The chief exception is the goliath’s northern shoulder star Betelgeuse, an immense and pulsating red supergiant. Betelgeuse, an asymmetric runaway star nearly a billion miles wide, is so large that if it were in the sun’s place, its variable “edge” would reach farther than the orbit of Jupiter.
Look beneath the three belt stars — from the east Alnitak, Alnilam and Mintaka — to locate Orion’s sword. Its central “star” is magnitude +4.0 Orion Nebula, a reflection/emission region of massive star formation. With averted gaze, skywatchers should be able to see the ghostly green tint of the nebula even in some light-affected backyards. Use a 5-inch or larger telescope to observe the six stars of the Trapezium Cluster, an exquisite glittering cluster of new stars about 15-30 times the mass of the sun.
In total, there are 81 stars of Constellation Orion. Orion is just one of many dazzlers in this vast swath of sky, with 2023 starting its first week with something of a sensation. Mars, brilliant at magnitude −1.07, lingers less than 10 degrees from red giant Aldebaran, the eye of Taurus, all month. Mars is rapidly retreating since its Dec. 7 opposition, standing tonight at about 58.8 million miles (94.6 million km) away, ending January at 81.4 million miles (131 million km). By Independence Day, the god of war will be low in the west and greatly diminished, setting early at magnitude +1.75 and 207.3 million miles (333.4 million km) distant.
Enjoy its high mid-evening transits while you can. Aldebaran is along the line of sight to the Hyades, an open cluster whose brightest stars form the V-shaped face of the bull of Zeus. To its west is the Pleiades, an open star cluster of 14 naked eye blue giants, which contrasts markedly with the ruddy hue of the god of war. Though outshined by neighboring Seven Sisters, the Hyades is actually nearer at 153 light years. Use binoculars.
The Red Planet pairs twice with the moon this month. The two orbs come within 2½ degrees of one another Tuesday [Jan. 3]. Around 10 p.m. Jan. 30, the moon barely misses occulting (covering) Mars by a mere fraction of a degree. Their closeness will be remarkable nonetheless. Skywatchers in southern Colorado and points south have a better chance of catching the occultation.
Another intimate pairing, a planetary conjunction in fact, occurs with Venus and Saturn each night about half an hour after sunset Jan. 22-24. The closest conjunction for the year sees Venus, 76 times brighter, come within ½ degree of Saturn. The difference in brilliance is such that observing Saturn, awash in Venusian splendor, may require binoculars.
There’s no particular celestial, meteorological or mythological reason that the New Year begins Jan. 1. It’s coincidental that the brightest star in the night sky, Sirius the scorcher, strikes the meridian at exactly midnight New Year’s Day. That Jan. 1 is the first day of the year is the result of Gaius Julius Caesar’s reforms of the Roman calendar. The Roman calendar was based on the lunar cycle having 304 days of 38 market cycles, leaving 50 days as unorganized wintertime. After consulting with mathematicians and astronomers, Caesar’s edict involved the addition days and shuffling the months. He pronounced that Janus, the god of beginnings, ends and transitions (as well as wars and peace, doors and passageways) would be the patron of the first month of the year.
Janus, strictly a Roman god, is depicted as having two faces, one facing backward, the other forward. The first modern New Year’s celebration was Jan. 1, 45 B.C.E. The Julian calendar did much to address many of the intercalary artifices — manipulations — necessary to correct for the errors inherent in the Roman calendar. However, it calculated that the length of one year was 365.25 days, incorrect by about 11 minutes, an error that led to calendrical “drift.” The Julian calendar was tweaked by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582, leaving the Gregorian calendar that most countries use today in their civil purposes.
The moon is full at 4:07 p.m. Jan. 6 and is called the Full Wolf Moon.
Now that it’s snowing in many parts of Japan, winter sports are in full swing. From skiing down the powdery white slopes at Niseko to hiking up trails covered in snow, this winter season, never miss a shot with the Grip Hot Shot 7 by Kenko Tokina.
Photo: Kenko Tokina
Using a combination of 3M Thinsulate and a honeycomb pattern, the gloves are made to provide more insulation and offer a tighter grip. For precise setting adjustments, the thumb and forefinger have a thimble mechanism making it easier to focus or press the shutter button. The gloves also have an added pocket for memory card storage and other miscellaneous items.
Available in four sizes from S to XL on the official Kenko Tokina website, the Grip Hot Shot 7 costs ¥ 7,891.
Directed by Marie Kreutzer. Starring Vicky Krieps, Florian Teichtmeister, Katharina Lorenz, Jeanne Werner, Alma Hasun, Manuel Rubey, Finnegan Oldfield. 15A cert, gen release, 115 min
In Kreutzer’s innovative historical drama, Krieps plays Empress Elisabeth of Austria, the beloved 19th-century monarch whose 1898 assassination – an event transmogrified by Kreutzer’s script – was part of an escalating sequence that led to the first World War. Corsage shares some obvious DNA with Pablo Larraine’s Spencer and Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette. But where those films swoon for their put-upon heroines, Krieps brings an unapologetic flintiness. Kreutzer’s inventive fifth feature is complemented by cinematographer Judith Kaufman’s original high-angled dinner tables and low-angled horses. Take that, The Crown. TB
The Kingdom: Exodus ★★★★☆
Directed by Lars Von Trier, Morten Arnfred. Starring Mikael Persbrandt, Bodil Jorgenson, Lars Mikkelsen, Alexander Skarsgard, Willem Dafoe, Udo Kier. Mubi, 312 min.
The concluding five episodes of Von Trier’s spooky hospital series come together as the most unsettling Christmas movie of all time. Returning a quarter of a century after season two, we wind the usual morass of scuzzy, messed-up horror – this time threaded with metatextual gags. Almost everything Von Trier does, even when deathly serious, is some sort of a joke. Indeed, he is, perhaps, at his most jocular when at his most earnest. Boasting diverting, angular performances, The Kingdom: Exodus is mischievousness on a dementedly grand scale. There is nobody quite like Von Trier. DC
France ★★★★☆
Directed by Bruno Dumont. Starring Léa Seydoux, Blanche Gardin, Benjamin Biolay, Emanuele Arioli, Juliane Köhler, Gaëtan Amiel, Jawad Zemmar, Marc Bettinelli. Mubi 133 min
The latest from the endlessly unpredictable Dumont is as broad as the hexagon-shaped country it giddily satirises. Shots are fired at the 24-hour news cycle, embedded journalism, and Macronism in a having-it-all melodrama built around a celebrity journalist bluntly named France de Meurs (Seydoux, never better). Dumont has seldom attempted so many swerves and shifts as he manages here. France, like the director, makes for a pleasing guessing game. The late composer Christophe, whose iconic track Road to Salina enlivened Kill Bill Vol 2 and Let the Bodies Tan, takes his final bow with a superb score. TB
Wildcat ★★★☆☆
Directed by Melissa Lesh, Trevor Beck Frost. Featuring Harry Turner, Samantha Zwicker. Limited release, 106 min
A couple in a remote part of the wilderness make friends with a young wild cat and seek to educate the beast towards a release back into its natural habitat. Sound familiar? This often gripping documentary looks to have translated the story of Born Free to contemporary Peru. Harry Turner and Samantha Zwicker work hard to rehabilitate an orphan ocelot while Harry seeks to process traumas hanging over from his time serving in Afghanistan. The nature photography is strong, but the film is ultimately more concerned with Harry than his charge. An odd beast. DC
On a brisk fall evening in rural Boone County, John Essex walks up a hill inside a small church cemetery. With a backpack and camping chair, he weaves through dilapidated grave markers to a round patch of grass where he places his belongings.
As the sun sets, hidden just behind a barn off to the west, the sky fills with the warmest of colors. Though, the painting-like sunset barely catches Essex’s attention as he unpacks his things.
From atop the hill, he can see for miles. Winding country roads sit nestled between freshly harvested cornfields. There’s far less light pollution and a big open sky ready to show off its stars. It’s quiet and it’s dark, and for this hobbyist astrophotographer it’s exactly what he needs.
In the past from his backyard, Essex simply enjoyed star gazing with his flea market telescope, sometimes attempting to use his mobile phone to snap a picture of his find.
With typical rigs being expensive and cumbersome, astrophotography has had its issues. But Essex says with the help of a new tool, that’s not the case anymore.
On the crowdfunding site Kickstarter in October 2020, Essex backed French-owned company Vaonis which calls its Vespera device “the perfect combination of telescope and camera.” The camera arrived at Essex’s doorstep earlier in 2022, at the price tag of $1500.
“I liked the idea you can get galaxies, and nebula, and the moon,” Essex said. “And I thought this would be great to do with Jack, my son.”
Through GPS, the new camera auto-tracks to find various far-off photogenic galaxies lightyears away. Slowly the camera turns as it scans the sky. This is when Essex says you can explore the universe.
“I was so blown away,” he said of his first photo. “It was just mindblowing.”
Because of the distance and lack of light, photos can take hours to expose. Essex says he fills the time listening to podcasts.
“I listen to pop culture stuff about movies, comics and TV shows,” he said with a laugh. “It’s just nice to hear people talking, you know, being out here.”
To Essex, the 19 different cosmic objects he’s been able to photograph are “magical” but he says Jack’s renewed interest in space and science has been the most stellar.
Contact IndyStar photojournalist Mykal McEldowney at 317-790-6991 or [email protected]. Follow him on Instagram or Twitter.
Denis Vejas (1986 Lithuania) is a Vilnius-based visual storyteller and hardcore traveler. A big part of his work has been done in nomadic settings, living the experiences that the road brings. As a photographer and a traveler, he always felt attracted by the things happening on the peripheries of the global world, focusing on the social outskirts and the spaces that are commonly marginalized.
Denis documented these nightscapes for five months in Ghana.
Denis Vejas spent around 13 years on the road traveling independently. He thinks the state of being constantly curious, always facing something new, and being open for whatever comes next is the backbone of both; his work and his personality.
Please visit his website for more interesting photography documentaries.
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Usually people flock to Peggys Cove to see the iconic lighthouse, but on Saturday morning they were looking for something different.
Armed with binoculars and a photo identification guide, families searched the water for bird species and recorded what they found.
As part of the event, children were encouraged to participate.
The annual Christmas Bird Count is the longest-running citizen science project in North America, said Becky Parker, executive director of Nature Nova Scotia.
Every year on the same day, groups of volunteers in different regions go out and count as many birds as they can in the same 24-kilometre radius.
“The Christmas bird count since 1900 has been really valuable for generating oodles of data from sites across North America,” Parker said.
The Nova Scotia counts take place between Dec. 14 and Jan. 5.
The data is then submitted to a database that can help researchers track each bird species. It’s used in reports like The State of Canada’s Birds.
This is the first time the count has been conducted at Peggys Cove. Close to 100 people showed up.
Parker said though the project has been going on for more than a century, the technique has modernized over time.
“Back in the day, it was a little less ethical of a count,” she said.
“They used to shoot the birds out of the sky, create a big pile, and then have a competition with their friends and see who would get the most. So it did create some really interesting data, but we do things kind of differently today.”
Guns are no longer involved, but the kids did borrow supplies to help them see the faraway birds.
“I did kind of see it with my monoculars, but it was black and it was too far away, so it was like a dot,” said Diana Lee, age five.
That’s why people like Jason Dain were on site to help identify things that may look like a black dot to the untrained eye.
“Today we had 18 species so far, which is pretty good for this time of year,” said Dain, who is on the board of directors of the Nova Scotia Bird Society.
“We probably had a couple hundred individual birds today, so there was probably 30 harlequin ducks and probably a dozen or two dozen long-tailed ducks.”
Dain said some of the species seen every year are common, but some are at risk, like the harlequin duck. He said over the years, he has noticed increasing numbers.
“It feels good, it’s like you like to contribute to the data set and contribute to the population monitoring and they’re such a beautiful duck,” he said. “They have lots of character and lots of personality.”
“My mom probably just brought me here because we always stay inside and play the Nintendo Switch usually, and she always wants us to go out and take a walk, but I never want to,” Emberly said.
Dain said it’s important to get kids interested in animals and nature while they’re young.
A compact, lightweight telephoto zoom was still conspicuously absent from Nikon’s Z system collection but Tamron stepped in to fill the gap with its 70-300mm F/4.5-6.3 Di III RXD (Model A047). A relatively affordable lens with a classic zoom range, it was a rejigged version of a lens that was originally launched in Sony E-mount guise.
See other installments in our 12 lenses of Christmas series
Another telephoto conversion job saw the launch of the Tamron 150-500mm F/5-6.7 Di III VC VXD (Model A057X), again being the repurposing of a Sony E-mount lens but this time for Fujifilm X system cameras. As such, it gives a monster effective zoom range of 225-750mm. It became Tamron’s third in a growing collection of X-mount lenses.
On the wide-angle front, a full-frame compatible Nikon Z system lens designed by Tamron launched as the Nikon Z 17-28mm f/2.8, this one being tweaked and rebadged as an own-brand Nikkor lens. Like the sibling ‘Nikon’ 28-75mm zoom, it offers a compact and lightweight alternative ‘trinity’ zoom with a slightly different zoom range than usual but still with a fast and constant f/2.8 aperture.
Tamron also announced a brand new 20-40mm f/2.8 Di III VXD zoom lens for Sony E-mount cameras, shoehorning wide viewing angles into a really compact and lightweight design, again with a fast and constant f/2.8 aperture rating.
Nikon certainly hasn’t been slack in announcing new lenses of its own design and released an updated roadmap in September, adding four additional lenses that took the total count up to nearly 40. New lenses included full-frame compatible 35mm and 135mm primes, along with a 70-180mm zoom, and in the DX camp, a new Z DX 12-28mm PZ, ideal for wide-angle videography.
Meanwhile, at The Photography Show, we got our hands on the mighty Canon RF 600mm F4L IS USM, an absolute dream of a super-telephoto prime for action, sports and wildlife photography, with a typically nightmarish price tag of around $13,000.
There was plenty of Fujifilm news in September, kicking off with the announcement that the Fujinon XF56mm F1.2 R WR was to get a makeover. Building on the success of the original lens, which excelled for portraiture, the revamped version was promised to have greater resolving power, a closer minimum focus distance and the addition of weather-seals. The improved resolution comes in the wake of the 40.2MP Fujifilm X-H2 and, with that camera in mind, Fujifilm also listed 20 lenses from the Fujinon line-up that can make the most of all those megapixels.
For Fujifilm shooters that love the retro look typical of X system cameras, you can max out on nostalgia with the Minox Color-Minotar 35mm f/2.8, as featured in the Minox 35 GT camera and now adapted for the Fujifilm X system.
Sticking with Fujifilm but taking a step up to medium format, the Fujinon GF20-35mm F4 R WR launched as the widest lens for the GFX system, going noticeably wider than the GF23mm F4 R LM WR prime lens. Further GFX news included the announcement of two tilt & shift lenses, namely the Fujinon GF30mm f/5.6 T/S and GF100mm f/5.6 T/S Macro.
New offerings from companies with a rich, long and highly renowned heritage in photography included the Leitz range of Hugo cine lenses, the initial set comprising seven full-frame lenses ranging from 21-90mm in focal length, all with a T1.5 aperture rating and recreating the look of Leica M glass. Hasselblad released three sumptuous new primes for its medium format X System, namely the Hasselblad XCD 2,5/38V, XCD 2,5/55V and XCD 2,5/90V. In full-frame terms, they equate to 30mm, 43mm and 71mm lenses.
In other news, Samyang served up five new ‘V-AF’ autofocus prime lenses for Sony full-frame E-mount cameras, primarily aimed at videographers. And Panasonic announced its LUMIX S 18mm F1.8 (S-S18) prime for its full-frame range of L-mount mirrorless cameras. In the APS-C camp, Tokina announced its atx-m 11-18mm f/2.8 as the company’s first ever E-mount zoom lens.
NiSi, better known for its photographic filters, announced a new APS-C format 9mm f/2.8 ultra-wide-angle prime for Sony E and Fujifilm X system cameras. Leica reimagined its legendary Summilux 35mm f/1.4 ASPH lens and Laowa announced a new 58mm f/2.8 2X Ultra Macro APO lens for mirrorless cameras.
September’s review schedule kicked off with the wonderfully versatile, compact and lightweight Canon RF 14-35mm F4L IS USM. An instant classic for full-frame EOS R system cameras, we gave this lens a perfect 5-star rating. We weren’t quite so overwhelmed by the new Canon RF-S 18-45mm f/4.5-6.3 IS STM and Canon RF-S 18-150mm F3.5-6.3 IS STM but were still impressed by the dinky little delights.
For Sony APS-C format mirrorless cameras, we reviewed the Tokina atx-m 11-18mm F2.8 E, loving the compact, lightweight design, constant f/2.8 aperture and overall performance. We also tested the retro-tastic Leica 50mm APO Summicron-M f/2 ASPH, a classic lens with a typically ‘legendary’ price tag.