Archive for April 30th, 2011

Suspect Found In Bretnacher Case – Student Who Died In Budapest

Italian authorities have questioned Paolo Pierre, said to be the boyfriend of French student Ophelie Bretnacher, who died in mysterious circumstances in Budapest two years ago, according to the tabloid Blikk. Pierre left Hungary the day after Bretnacher went missing on December 4, 2008.

Budapest prosecutors spokeswoman Gabriella Skoda would not confirm the report. She said only that Pierre was one of three Italian nationals sought by the authorities in connection with Bretnacher’s death.

The 22-year-old Bretnacher arrived in Hungary as part of the Erasmus study programme and was last seen in a downtown bar on the night of her disappearance.

After her body was found in the 21st District stretch of the Danube some weeks later, forensic experts said her death was caused by drowning and ruled out foul play.

An autopsy repeated in France confirmed the report, but Bretnacher’s parents rejected the assumption that their daughter had committed suicide.

via Suspect Found In Bretnacher Case – Student Who Died In Budapest – XpatLoop.com – Current affairs.

‘Rambo’ to the rescue of Hungarian film industry

Hungary shut down its main film funding body on Friday and said the producer of the “Rambo” and “Terminator” series of films, Andrew Vajna, would steer its domestic film industry out of financial crisis.

After months of controversy and political manoeuvering, the government announced it was shutting down the Hungarian Motion Picture Public Foundation or MMKA, which is responsible for funding most domestic movies, but is mired in debts of some 40 million euros ($59 million).

“The state budget simply does not have enough money to settle the debts,” the ministry of public administration and justice said in a statement.

“The MMKA’s tasks will be assumed in future by a new organisation to be set up by commissioner Vajna,” who was scheduled to present his strategy early next month, the statement said.

The appointment of the Hungarian-born US film producer to reform the Hungarian film industry drew heavy criticism from home-grown filmmakers and their foreign colleagues earlier this year.

“The Hungarian government has decided to replace a democratic self-governing structure ensuring pluralism with a one-person decision-making system,” the filmmakers said in a joint declaration in February.

Vajna has been appointed for a period of two years, during which he will overhaul, among other things, the system of state aid for filmmaking.

“We fear that the decision might endanger the versatility of Hungarian films,” the declaration said.

Nine Hungarian film directors — including Bela Tarr, Miklos Jancso, Ildiko Enyedi and Marta Meszaros — signed the declaration, alongside international filmmakers like Oscar-nominated directors Gus van Sant and Alfonso Cuaron, Michael Haneke, Olivier Assayas, Cristian Mungiu, Andrzej Wajda and British actress Tilda Swinton.

via AFP: ‘Rambo’ to the rescue of Hungarian film industry.