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    FILM CHOICE
    by Stephen Dalton

    The Times (London)
    April 25, 2006, Tuesday

    NIAGARA (1953)

    Channel 4, 1.20pm. Marilyn Monroe graduated to headline movie stardom
    with an untypical role as a scheming femme fatale.

    On the surface, Rose Loomis (Monroe) is visiting Niagara Falls in
    an attempt to rekindle her marriage to George (Joseph Cotten). But
    in reality she is waging a psychological war against her husband,
    hatching a murder plot in which a young couple (Jean Peters and Max
    Showalter) become fatally entangled. Henry Hathaway's glossy thriller
    is notable chiefly for Monroe's smouldering, malevolent performance.

    (92 min)

    ALMOST FAMOUS (1999)

    ITV2, 9pm/11.45pm. The writer and director Cameron Crowe revisited
    his early career as a teenage reporter for Rolling Stone magazine in
    the 1970s for this warm-hearted, lightly fictionalised memoir. The
    fresh-faced newcomer Patrick Fugit is charming and gangly as the
    young Crowe surrogate, a southern Californian mummy's boy who ends up
    sharing groupies and life lessons on the road with a bickering rock
    band. Kate Hudson, Billy Crudup, Jason Lee and an Oscar-nominated
    Frances McDormand co-star. Philip Seymour Hoffman also makes an
    appearance as the legendary rock writer Lester Bangs. (122 min).

    THE COLOUR OF POMEGRANATES (1968)

    Artsworld, 10pm. Imprisoned and banned by the Soviet authorities for
    his human rights activism and homosexuality, the Armenian director
    Sergei Parajanov crafted an exquisitely beautiful, occasionally
    impenetrable tribute to the 18th-century poet Sayat Nova in The
    Colour of Pomegranates. Laden with religious and cultural symbols,
    Parajanov's absorbing visual poem eventually became an underground
    festival hit in the West despite censorship at home. He returned to
    film-making after his release from jail, dying in 1990 just as the
    Soviet Union crumbled. (79 min)

    The defendants, who were indicted Thursday, have been charged with
    conspiracy, health care fraud, Medicare kickbacks, making false
    statements to Medicare and money laundering.

    The group allegedly was led by Konstantin Grigoryan, 56, of Altadena,
    a former colonel in the Soviet army; his wife, Mayya Leonidovna
    Grigoryan, 54; the Grigoryans' son-in-law, Eduard Gershelis, 34, of
    Los Angeles; Mayya Grigoryan's brother-in-law, Aleksandr Treynker,
    48, of Canoga Park; and Haroutyun Gulderyan, 36, of Tujunga.

    The Grigoryans and Gershelis have been in federal custody since their
    March 21 arrests. Gulderyan and Treynker have been released on bond.

    The five are scheduled to appear in court June 13.

    Gershelis' attorney, Jerome Mooney, described the episode as "a very
    unfortunate circumstance." Attorneys for the other defendants did
    not return phone calls from the Los Angeles Daily News seeking comment.

    Last December, three operators of an Orange County clinic pleaded
    guilty to charges they bilked insurers out of nearly $15 million by
    operating on healthy people, authorities said.
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