But that wasn’t even the best part. Cena also took time to personally send a direct message to Al-Muwizri. While he won t reveal what it said exactly, he said the message was “beautiful, motivating and sincere”. Cena also explained that the photo had first come to him with the watermark cropped off and he wasn t originally aware it was missing.
Al-Muwizri said he was so touched by the message, he is planning
to create
“I want to thank Cena so very much for what he did.
You might think someone in his position wouldn’t even pay attention to me, but you can see that he wouldn’t have made it as a megastar without being humble,” he says.
A Dateline report says that US studio New Line Cinema is in talks with Indonesian director Timo Tjahjanto to helm the film based on the 2016 blockbuster. Currently on board for the project is James Wan, who will produce the film, while Gary Dauberman will adapt the screenplay.
The original film, directed by Yeon Sang-ho
, premiered at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival and became an international box-office hit and received critical acclaim. It also spawned a sequel,
Train to Busan: Peninsula, which was released in 2020.
Train to Busan takes place mostly on a train as a zombie apocalypse breaks out in South Korea and threatens all the passengers on board. While it may seem like a typical horror film, there s more than meets the eye as viewers follow Seok-woo, his estranged young daughter and other passengers during the journey.
SHARE
A UN Women s Valentine’s Day illustration on social media has been removed after it was criticised for featuring a range of couples and a single black woman standing alone.
The cartoon, which drew backlash and has since been deleted, showed three couples of various backgrounds holding hands and hugging, as well as a lone black woman hugging herself.
So this is the best image the @UN Women could post on Valentine’s Day where a black woman is on her own? Hhayi let me tool. pic.twitter.com/RLGCUhdE8S Wisani (@cashtowk) February 16, 2021
Social media users were quick to point out the problematic nature of the drawing: