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Neil Jordan to Direct Adaptation of Own Novel ‘The Well of Saint Nobody,’ Jeremy Irons, Helena Bonham Carter, Aidan Quinn to Star in Film for Bankside (EXCLUSIVE)

Alex Ritman Oscar-winning filmmaker Neil Jordan is to direct a feature based on one of his own novels for the first time. “The Well of Saint Nobody,” adapted from “The Crying Game,” “Interview With the Vampire” and “Michael Collins” director’s acclaimed 2023 novel of the same name, will be introduced to buyers in Cannes by Bankside Films. Oscar winner Jeremy Irons (“The French Lieutenant’s Woman,” “Reversal of Fortune,”) Oscar nominee Helena Bonham Carter (“Ocean’s Eight,” “The King’s Speech”) and Aidan Quinn (“Michael Collins,” “Legends of the Fall”) are attached to star in the film, currently in pre-production, and expected to start shooting later in 2024.
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Scientists baffled by ‘alien’ goldfish with no anus, backbone or shell
alien goldfish”, has possibly been solved by scientists who believe the creature to be a sort of mollusc.First discovered in the Bear Gulch Limestone fossil site in Montana, United State in the late 1960s, the Typhloesus wellsi lived about 330million years ago. The anatomy of the species hadscientists stumped on its position on the tree of life with the creature possessing a rugby ball-shaped body, a lack of a shell as well as no backbone or anus.READ MORE:Prince Philip investigated UFOs for 70 years - now 'Royal X-Files' could be releasedDr Jean-Bernard Caron, a co-author of the research from the Royal Ontario Museum, said: “[Typhloesus] was sort of an orphan in the tree of life.”Caron added: “What we think is that [Typhloesus] might be some sort of unique group of molluscs that evolved during the carboniferous [period] and eventually went extinct.”Alongside his colleague Professor Simon Conway Morris, from the University of Cambridge, the pair describe how they studied about a dozen specimens of Typhloesus housed in the Royal Ontario Museum and discussed evidence they found resulting in their deductions.In the foregut of Typhloesus, there was a 4mm-long structure comprised of two rows of about 20 triangular teeth, curved backwards with researchers suggesting the Typhloesus turned this structure inside out.Caron said: “An analogy here [is] the tongue of a lizard, for example, capturing an insect.
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