You’ll fi nd the latest blockbusters, an excellent selection of TV and
audio programmes and games that will keep you amused for hours
on many of our fl ights. Our listings are now categorised by system
a,
b,
c,
d
for fl ights from the UK and
a,
b,
c,
d
for fl ights
to the UK depending on what aircraft you’re fl ying on today. Your
cabin crew will announce which listing you should refer to at the
beginning of the fl ight. Don’t worry if you miss it, a member of cabin
crew will be happy to advise you about the guide.
- Jude Law was born on 29 December 1972, in Lewisham, south London.
- His unusual fi rst name is said to be a reference by his parents both to the Beatles’ song Hey Jude and to the Thomas Hardy novel Jude the Obscure.
- Law began acting at the age of 12 with the National Youth Music Theatre. He landed his fi rst television role in a soap opera at the age of 17.
- In 1997 he won the Evening Standard British Film Award for Most Promising Newcomer, for his role as Lord Alfred Douglas, the lover of Oscar Wilde (played by Stephen Fry) in the acclaimed biopic Wilde.
- It was far from the only awards show he would be invited to. Law has twice been nominated for an Academy Award: for Best Supporting Actor for TheTalented Mr Ripley in 2000 and for Best Actor for Cold Mountain in 2003.
- Law has three children by his ex-wife, actress Sadie Frost: sons Rafferty and Rudy and daughter Iris, whose godmother is Kate Moss.
- In 2005 Law was the subject of a press scandal, and issued a public apology to his then fi ancée Sienna Miller for the relationship he had with his children’s nanny.
- Well-documented as being no fan of the paparazzi, Law has said of photographers: “I hate the intrusion into my private life. It’s like being followed by snipers.” Some journalists have nicknamed him Privacy Law as a result.
- Next year, Law is set to portray Shakespeare’s Hamlet on the London stage, in a production directed by Kenneth Branagh.
NR – Not Rated
U – Universal suitable for children aged four
years and over.
PG – Parental Guidance suitable for children
aged eight years and over. Parents are advised
to monitor fi lm content for suitability for
younger children.
12/12A only suitable for children over the
age of 12 unless accompanied by an adult.
15 only suitable for audiences over the age
of 15. May contain scenes of sex, violence
and/or bad language.
18 only suitable for audiences over the age
of 18. May contain scenes of sex, violence
and/or bad language.
For more information, visit The British
Board of Film Classifi cation website at
www.bbfc.co.uk




