B4 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 2020 Unnerved by online infi delity Dear Annie: My hus- me a number, but when I band and I have been mar- have tried it, it doesn’t work. ried for more than 50 years. So I have gone behind his We have had a great life back and checked his mes- together, sharing sages on his phone DEAR a lot of the same and have found that ANNIE interests. they pretty much We had a great text daily. He has not friendship with said a word to me another couple. Sev- about it. And I have eral years ago, the noticed at times that husband caught my he deletes her mes- husband and his wife sages but not any- sexting each other. ANNIE LANE one else’s, so I am Creators I do believe it was feeling he is trying Syndicate Inc. a one-time thing, to hide them from as she was drink- me. I have yet to ing and the circumstances confront him with this. Am pointed to being a one- I being stupid about this or night thing. I wanted to for- should I be concerned? His give and forget, as she was a lying is what bothers me really great friend. However, about this whole situation. her husband insisted that we — Disgruntled Wife have no further contact with Dear Disgruntled each other. Wife: The fi rst time you We have another friend caught your husband sex- who is a single mom with ting another woman should two grown children. They have called for some seri- live a couple of hundred ous relationship repairs. Not miles from us. For some rea- just sweeping it under the son, she started texting my rug as a one-time thing. That husband about issues she has behavior is unacceptable, had with her children. Over and if you’re going to stay the years, they have contin- married to him, then some ued to text each other, but it serious counseling should be is getting more and more fre- done. quent. One time I looked at Fool me once, shame on his text messages, and she you; fool me twice, shame was sending him pictures on me. Your husband is lying of herself. She is beautiful to you and keeping secrets and younger. I told him that about his correspondence I was not comfortable with with another woman. Kindly all the texting and the pic- tell this woman that she tures she sends. Since then, I needs to fi nd a professional have found them texting a lot therapist to help her with her more. I confronted her, and grown children problems, she said that my husband is and she needs to stay away her best friend and a big sup- from your husband. port system to her. She has a Your husband has lied lot of issues with her grown to you many times, and children. I told my husband his behavior points to him that I did not have an issue knowing better. Otherwise, with their friendship, but my he wouldn’t feel the need issue is his keeping it from to delete these messages. It me. is not unreasonable for you I asked that he tell me to ask him for honesty and about her texting, and what’s openness in his communica- going on. He agreed. But tion. It is time to go into mar- nothing has changed. I knew riage counseling and have they were still texting, and your husband come clean. he wasn’t saying anything You sound like too kind of to me, so I tried to check his a woman to be lied to and messages from his computer, taken for granted. It is time but he changed the password. to stick up for yourself and When I asked him what his tell him no more, once and new password was, he gave for all. Oregon fi lm studio wins its fi rst Golden Globe for ‘Missing Link’ By MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian “Frozen?” “Toy Story?” “The Lion King?” Not Sunday night. The Golden Globe for best ani- mated movie went to tiny Hillsboro fi lm studio Laika for its latest feature, “Miss- ing Link,” which beat out all those Hollywood blockbusters. “I’m fl abbergasted,” director and writer Chris Butler exclaimed as he reached the stage to collect the award. He thanked the 450 animators and craftspeo- ple who made the fi lm in the Hillsboro warehouse where Laika makes its movies, then singled out studio CEO Tra- vis Knight “for making this possible.” Sunday’s upset win is a major piece of redemption for “Missing Link,” which was warmly reviewed but collected just $26 million at the worldwide box offi ce – well below a budget that was likely north of $60 million, and by far the worst perfor- mance of any Laika fi lm. As with Laika’s other fi lms, though, “Missing Link” was beloved by ani- mation enthusiasts for its dis- tinctive, handcrafted look. Hollywood trade pub- lications rated Laika’s win among the night’s big sur- prises, but maybe it shouldn’t have been. The other nominees in the animation category were all retreads — “Frozen 2,” “Toy Story 4,” Disney’s “The Lion King” remake and the third fi lm in the “How to Train Your Dragon” fran- chise. “Missing Link,” by contrast, was an original, offbeat idea. Released last April, “Missing Link” featured the A-list voices of Holly- wood stars Hugh Jackman, Zach Galifi anakis, Emma ‘Missing Link’ writer and director Chris Butler and producer Arianne Sutner accept the Golden Globe for best animated movie. Laika Studios Sir Lionel Frost, left, voiced by Hugh Jackman and Mr. Link, right, voiced by Zach Galifi anakis in director Chris Butler’s ‘Missing Link,’ a Laika Studios Production and Annapurna Pictures release. Thompson and Zoe Saldana. It’s the tale of a 19th century explorer who comes across Bigfoot in the Pacifi c North- west, then accompanies the creature to the Himalayas in search of family. “Miss- ing Link” is now available to stream on Hulu or rent on Amazon for $3.99. “We try to tell more irrev- erent stories, try to do things other studios wouldn’t do,” Butler told entertain- ment reporters at the Bev- erly Hilton Hotel, according to the Hollywood Reporter. “Walking around our studio is like walking around San- ta’s workshop, all kinds of artists.” In an age of comput- er-generated effects, Laika is among a handful of stu- dios worldwide specializ- ing in an old-fashioned tech- nique called stop-motion animation. The Oregon stu- dio’s animators painstak- ingly manipulate puppets one frame at a time to simu- late motion. Undeterred by its modest showing at the box offi ce, Laika has been running a full-tilt promotional cam- paign for “Missing Link” in the run-up to awards season. Ads for the fi lm appeared regularly on the websites of the major Hollywood trade publications in recent weeks. And the studio mounted a massive, multi-story bill- board promoting “Missing Link” in downtown Port- land last fall — months after its theatrical release had concluded. Nike co-founder Phil Knight owns the studio and is Travis Knight’s father. “Missing Link” is the stu- dio’s fi fth fi lm. All its pre- decessors were Oscar nomi- nees, though before Sunday none had taken home a major Hollywood award. “Missing Link” was already a favorite for an Oscar nomination — nomi- nees are announced a week from Monday — and with Sunday’s win at the Golden Globes, its prospects for winning an Academy Award next month may have shot up. Our Quality Is Timeless. This Price Isn’t! Miracle-Ear Quality For $895. Why Wait? Hearing is believing! Right now, for a very limited time, you can get a fully digital, genuine Miracle-Ear® hearing aid for less than $900. 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