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Cosmobeauté Malaysia and beautyexpo will expand into East Malaysia with the launch of the Cosmobeauté Malaysia Borneo Festival 2026 at the Sabah International Convention Centre (SICC) from May 25 to 26.
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This image released by Universal Pictures shows a scene from the film "Monkey Man." (Universal Pictures via AP)
In addition to the fraught topic, the directorial debut was beset with challenges during production, including the coronavirus pandemic-driven shutdown, limited crew members and a series of physical injuries. “I broke my hand, I broke my foot, I tore my shoulder. Everything that could have possibly gone wrong in the making of this film did go wrong,” he told reporters at SXSW. “And it’s really been a humbling experience.” Sharlto Copley, who plays Tiger, says Patel went through an unusual hell during the filming process. “I’m just filled with gratitude, really,” Copley says. “I keep saying to Dev, it’s like this grace that helped us through this one.” After surviving the grueling production process, the film was dropped by Netflix. Netflix did not respond to multiple requests for comment from the AP. “The studio that first acquired it, they didn’t really know what they’d bargained for,” Patel says. “The actual film itself is a lot denser and it’s saying a lot. Let’s say that it’s not your usual action scene on page one, and then you continue fighting nonstop. It’s trying to do a bit more.” It was “just sitting there gathering dust,” Patel says. He was ready to let it go when Oscar-winning writer and director Jordan Peele – and Founder of Monkeypaw Productions – swooped in to save the day, purchasing the film through his production partnership with Universal Pictures. “He saw me as a filmmaker. He saw the pain I’d been through,” recalls Patel. “He said, ‘I hope you don’t mind. I’ve shared it with Universal and we’re going to buy it.’ I literally – I fell off my seat.” For Peele, “Monkey Man” reminded him of the ’80s and ’90s, when “movies were good.” “It was iconic. I felt passionately that it was demanding to be on the big screen,” Peele says. “I could immediately see that this was a director who had gone through lengths and pushed and pushed and pushed because it really makes it to the screen. I mean, you have a film that is just absolutely huge, and the story of it is really intoxicating.” “Monkey Man” received a standing ovation at its SXSW premiere. Video shows Patel standing on stage, moved to tears. “I did cry. I couldn’t help it, man. You feel so raw up there, and the response was just magical,” he says. After investing so much time into this debut, Patel says it was a quote from the legendary writer Rabindranath Tagore his father shared with him that finally allowed him to let go and release “Monkey Man” to the masses. “It’s something about ‘I’ve spent many days stringing and unstringing my instrument. And the song I came to sing remains unsung.’ Something like that,” Patel says. “I was like, ‘Dad, I get you, man. I got to sing this song. I got to let it go.’ And it’s the biggest leap of faith when you finally just say, ‘It’s not perfect, but it’s me. It represents me in this moment in time, in history, warts and all.’”





