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Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts

Friday, May 10, 2013

What Lohan's Movie Moms Had To Say To Her

Lindsay Lohan is serving a 90-day rehab sentence on lockdown, so she may not be able to spend Mother's Day with mom Dina, who blames her ex-husband, Michael, for Lindsay having to complete rehab in California rather than closer to home in New York. Earlier this year, Dina told the New York Daily News that Lindsay is "screwed up" because as a child she saw Michael abuse Dina. In 2011, the mother and daughter were spotted making out at Dina's 49th birthday party.


Lindsay's family may not be the best source of support right now, but the actress has had her share of strong and loving — if sometimes nutty — onscreen moms. Here they are, along with some motherly words they gave her characters.

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"Oh darling, I've loved you your whole life."


“When you get your body back, it's grounded.” (after learning that Lohan’s character has pierced her naval)


“I worry so about you living alone.”


“This is the fertility vase of the Ndebele tribe. Does that mean anything to you?”


Yolanda: Isn't that a Carter Family song? Lola (Lohan): Who? Yolanda: The Carter Family. Like us, only famous.


"Dear Rachel, My mother always told me the hardest things to do in life are to trust, to have faith and to forgive so I want you to hear the strength in my voice when I say I forgive you because I love you."


“I brought you some of your things to make you feel more at home.”


“Not that I'm counting, but if I'm not mistaken you just ended what, your fourth marriage?”


View the original article at Huffington Post / Celebrity

Thursday, October 20, 2011

MTV sets dates for Video Music and Movie Awards (AP)

NEW YORK – MTV has set the dates for next year's MTV Movie and Video Music Awards.

The MTV Movie Awards will air live from Los Angeles on June 3.

After an August date in Los Angeles this year, the VMAs will move to Sept. 9. A host city hasn't been announced. The show will also air live on the network.

The announcement was made Thursday.

This year's VMAs drew an audience of 12.44 million people, which gave MTV its biggest audience since 1993.

___

Online:

http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/us_mtv_awards/43323983/SIG=10kbpnmp3/*http://www.mtv.com


Yahoo! News

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Madonna's crown slips with mediocre movie reviews (Reuters)

VENICE, Italy (Reuters) – Madonna may be the "queen of pop," but her crown as movie director slipped this week after most early reviews of her second feature film "W.E." ranged from middling to poor.

The picture, which had its world premiere at the Venice film festival on Thursday, is loosely based on the life of American divorcee Wallis Simpson, whose affair with Kind Edward VIII led to his abdication.

Madonna said she had been fascinated by the story for some time, pondering why a man would make such a huge sacrifice for love.

Andrea Riseborough stars as Simpson and Abbie Cornish as a modern-day woman who becomes obsessed with the person who prompted a constitutional crisis in 1936.

Britain's Guardian newspaper did not spare Madonna's feelings with a one-out-of-five star review.

"Could it be that Madonna is in deadly earnest here?" wrote Xan Brooks.

"If so, her film is more risible than we had any right to expect; a primped and simpering folly, the turkey that dreamed it was a peacock."

Others were less damning, although the general tone was negative and one website quipped that it may be time for the 53-year-old singer to abdicate as a film maker.

Todd McCarthy of the Hollywood Reporter opined: "Madonna's second foray into directing is pleasing to the eyes and ears, but lacking anything for the soul."

And Mark Adams, chief critic for Screen Daily, wrote:

"Madonna aims high as she seeks to tackle love, celebrity, fame, abuse and disappointment, often hitting her targets -- and sometimes not -- but always offering up images that are beautifully shot and staged."

He singled out Riseborough's performance, which he described as "quite brilliant."

The Daily Telegraph gave W.E. three stars out of five, while Baz Bamigboye of the Daily Mail was generally complimentary.

"A lot of people will loathe it, simply because it's been made by Madonna," he wrote.

"But if they were to watch it with no knowledge of who directed, they would be pleasantly surprised. They might even find much of it enjoyable, although the odd moment may have them wondering if Madge has committed treason."

Some of Madonna's collaborators on the picture had wondered whether viewers' judgments might be colored by their opinion of the 53-year-old celebrity.

"When an iconic, global entity is involved it will be interesting to see how people react to that and whether people can judge the film without their own baggage or how they've felt about Madonna for 30 years," producer Kris Thykier told trade publication Variety.

The budget of W.E. is estimated to be around $15 million, and it hits movie theatres in North America in December.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


Yahoo! News

Friday, September 2, 2011

Madonna's crown slips with mediocre movie reviews (Reuters)

VENICE, Italy (Reuters) – Madonna may be the "queen of pop," but her crown as movie director slipped this week after most early reviews of her second feature film "W.E." ranged from middling to poor.

The picture, which had its world premiere at the Venice film festival on Thursday, is loosely based on the life of American divorcee Wallis Simpson, whose affair with Kind Edward VIII led to his abdication.

Madonna said she had been fascinated by the story for some time, pondering why a man would make such a huge sacrifice for love.

Andrea Riseborough stars as Simpson and Abbie Cornish as a modern-day woman who becomes obsessed with the person who prompted a constitutional crisis in 1936.

Britain's Guardian newspaper did not spare Madonna's feelings with a one-out-of-five star review.

"Could it be that Madonna is in deadly earnest here?" wrote Xan Brooks.

"If so, her film is more risible than we had any right to expect; a primped and simpering folly, the turkey that dreamed it was a peacock."

Others were less damning, although the general tone was negative and one website quipped that it may be time for the 53-year-old singer to abdicate as a film maker.

Todd McCarthy of the Hollywood Reporter opined: "Madonna's second foray into directing is pleasing to the eyes and ears, but lacking anything for the soul."

And Mark Adams, chief critic for Screen Daily, wrote:

"Madonna aims high as she seeks to tackle love, celebrity, fame, abuse and disappointment, often hitting her targets -- and sometimes not -- but always offering up images that are beautifully shot and staged."

He singled out Riseborough's performance, which he described as "quite brilliant."

The Daily Telegraph gave W.E. three stars out of five, while Baz Bamigboye of the Daily Mail was generally complimentary.

"A lot of people will loathe it, simply because it's been made by Madonna," he wrote.

"But if they were to watch it with no knowledge of who directed, they would be pleasantly surprised. They might even find much of it enjoyable, although the odd moment may have them wondering if Madge has committed treason."

Some of Madonna's collaborators on the picture had wondered whether viewers' judgments might be colored by their opinion of the 53-year-old celebrity.

"When an iconic, global entity is involved it will be interesting to see how people react to that and whether people can judge the film without their own baggage or how they've felt about Madonna for 30 years," producer Kris Thykier told trade publication Variety.

The budget of W.E. is estimated to be around $15 million, and it hits movie theatres in North America in December.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


Yahoo! News

Madonna thanks exes for encouraging movie career (Reuters)

VENICE, Italy (Reuters) – Pop star Madonna thanked her ex-husbands for encouraging her to take up a career in movies, as she arrived in Venice on Thursday for the world premiere of her lavish royal drama "W.E."

The 53-year-old American has been married to actor and director Sean Penn and British film maker Guy Ritchie -- and has spent much of the last few years behind the camera rather than on the stage.

W.E., her second feature film, appears at the Venice film festival outside the main competition, but the presence of one of the world's biggest celebrities inevitably dominated the attention of the world's press.

The film re-tells the story of American divorcee Wallis Simpson, whose affair with Britain's King Edward VIII led him to abdicate the throne.

It does so through the eyes of another American Wally Winthrop, played by Abbie Cornish, who lives in New York in the 1990s and becomes obsessed with the life of a woman with whom she bears an uncanny resemblance.

"I am and was attracted to very creative people which is why I married Sean Penn and Guy Ritchie, two very talented directors," Madonna told reporters after a press screening of W.E.

"They both encouraged me as a director and as a creative person to do what I did, and they were both very supportive," added the singer, who wore a short-sleeved black dress with white trim.

There was applause for the movie after the first screening and one early review, in the Daily Telegraph, gave W.E. three stars out of five.

"Her version of their (the Windsors') lives is a fantasia that will not trouble historians," wrote David Gritten. "Yet oddly, that's a relief after so many stale, plodding TV documentaries about this unlovely couple."

PARALLELS BETWEEN MADONNA, WALLIS

Madonna said she saw parallels between herself and Simpson, a woman who was vilified by many for her role in a constitutional crisis but who is sympathetically portrayed in W.E. by Andrea Riseborough.

Like Simpson, Madonna is a woman who lives her life in the public glare, and is also an American who moved to England for several years while married to Ritchie.

"I identified with her in that I think it's very common when people become celebrities or public figures or icons that we are often reduced to a soundbite and that you're given a few attributes and then you're not allowed to have anything more than that," she said.

"I did go through periods of feeling like I was an outsider when I first moved to England.

"I certainly didn't feel like that by the time I'd lived there for 10 years. And I feel, since I moved there, that I feel very welcomed by England."

Asked why she chose Simpson as a subject, Madonna replied:

"I was deeply and utterly swept up in trying to understand the reason that this man, King Edward VIII ... would relinquish this great position of power for love."

She added that she hoped the success of "The King's Speech," set at the same time and in a similar world to W.E., would help, not harm her project.

"I was a little bit nervous, because I thought, 'oh dear, if someone else is making a movie about the same time-frame, then who would be interested in my movie?'

"But then I saw the film and I saw that it was from a completely different point of view and I view the success of that film as sort of laying the groundwork for my movie.

"So there is a little bit of history and a little bit of knowledge and we are not starting with a blank slate."

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


Yahoo! News

Friday, August 26, 2011

UK spies sought German movie extra and Nazi agent (AP)

LONDON – At the end of World War II, British spies were in pursuit of a charismatic, multilingual German agent who had befriended Hollywood celebrities and persuaded British and American detainees to broadcast propaganda for the Nazis.

Secret files from the MI5 spy agency declassified Friday reveal the colorful story of Werner Plack, a German agent who moved from the film sets and nightclubs of prewar Los Angeles to the hotels of wartime Berlin and occupied Paris.

A Nazi interrogated by MI5 described Plack as a "freelance propaganda agent."

MI5 said it was eager to find him because he had "taken part in the recruitment of British renegades" who helped the Nazi war effort.

He was involved in persuading British comic writer P.G. Wodehouse to make radio broadcasts from Berlin for an American audience in 1941 — broadcasts that caused outrage in Britain.

MI5 sources filled in a vivid picture of Plack, described as having an "elegant appearance," a "strong build" and "good teeth."

U.S. officials told the British he had lived for years in Los Angeles, where he worked as a movie extra and for German consul Georg Gyssling, "his duties being to report to Gyssling on important film personages."

He also "was engaged in selling German wines to well known members of the film colony," said the report, which added that Plack "was reported to drink alcohol to excess and to possess a poor credit record."

In June 1940 he got into a bar brawl with a man "who had expressed resentment at statements made by Plack concerning Hitler."

In August 1940, Plack boarded a liner in San Francisco bound for Japan — carrying, U.S. authorities suspected, American secrets disguised in code in religious texts. His papers were searched when the ship stopped in Honolulu, but no coded messages were found.

Plack returned to Germany, where he worked for the Foreign Ministry to find English-speaking propagandists for the Nazis.

Witnesses reported seeing him in the presence of Wodehouse, the creator of Jeeves and Wooster, whose controversial broadcasts led some in Britain to accuse him of being a Nazi collaborator.

Questioned by MI5 near the end of the war, Wodehouse called the broadcasts a "hideous mistake" and said "I never had any intention of assisting the enemy."

And Plack seemed to be disappointed in Wodehouse. A detainee told MI5 that "Plack told me that the intention had been to use Wodehouse for propaganda purposes, but he had refused, after having spoken a few times, to broadcast any more on the German radio."

The file ends in December 1945, at which point Plack's whereabouts were unknown.

Online: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/


Yahoo! News

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Movie Scores: How the critics rated the new movies (AP)

LOS ANGELES – Conan is a fearless and muscular warrior, but he isn't winning the battle with film critics.

The remake of "Conan the Barbarian," with Jason Momoa in the role that made Arnold Schwarzenegger a major action star, is receiving below-average reviews in its opening weekend. AP Movie Critic Christy Lemire wrote in her one-star review: "The knowing sense of big, ridiculous fun that marked the 1982 original is gone, and in its place we get a self-serious series of generic sword battles and expository conversations."

Another remake that is faring far better with critics is the horror comedy "Fright Night," starring Anton Yelchin as a teenager who thinks his next-door neighbor (Colin Farrell) is a vampire. Lemire wrote: "This new version stays true to its origins by having a bit of cheeky fun, and the way it contemporizes the story is really rather clever." She gave the movie two and a half stars out of four.

Also debuting this weekend is the romance "One Day," based on the best-selling novel about two friends (Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess) whose lives intertwine over 20 years. Lemire wrote: "Maybe it was all more resonant, more poignant on the page: the many highs and lows and major life shifts that occur during the decades-spanning friendship/romance between Emma and Dexter in `One Day.'" She gave the film one and a half stars out of four.

"Spy Kids: All the Time in the World," the fourth film in Robert Rodriguez's family friendly series, wasn't screened for critics before its opening, so reviews were still trickling in Friday. It wasn't looking good early, though — or smelling good, given that Rodriguez added AromaScope scent cards to the moviegoing experience — with positive reviews hovering around 9 percent.

Here's a look at how these movies fared on the top review websites as of Friday afternoon. Each score is the percentage of positive reviews for the film:

• "Conan the Barbarian": Metacritic, 37; Movie Review Intelligence, 42.8; Rotten Tomatoes, 25. Average: 34.9.

• "Fright Night": Metacritic, 66; Movie Review Intelligence, 70.5; Rotten Tomatoes, 76. Average: 70.8.

• "One Day": Metacritic, 48; Movie Review Intelligence, 54.4; Rotten Tomatoes, 30. Average: 44.1.

___

Online:

http://www.metacritic.com/

http://moviereviewintelligence.com/

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/


Yahoo! News

Brad Pitt shoots zombie movie in Glasgow (AP)

LONDON – A smiling Brad Pitt has been seen waving to fans in the Scottish city of Glasgow as he left the set of his latest movie "World War Z."

The U.S. actor was in town this week to shoot the zombie horror movie, which is based on a book by Max Brooks.

Paramount film studio has made every effort to keep the movie under wraps. The set is closed to all media and no production details have been released.

The center of Glasgow has been transformed to depict Philadelphia in the aftermath of a war between humans and zombies. Shooting is expected to last two weeks.

The Glasgow Film Office says the movie involves almost 1,200 people and will pour over 2 million pounds ($3.3 million) into the local economy.


Yahoo! News

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Jessica Alba puts new baby kick in "Spy Kids" movie (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – It's been a busy week in the home of Jessica Alba and her husband Cash Warren, and it's about to get busier.

Alba gave birth over the weekend to her second daughter, Haven Garner Warren, and this coming Friday, Alba's new movie, "Spy Kids: All the Time in the World 4D," lands in theaters.

"Cash and I are so excited to announce the birth of our daughter Haven Garner Warren," Alba posted on her Facebook page over the weekend. "She was born on Saturday, weighed 7 lbs. and 19 inches long. Healthy and happy! Big sister Honor couldn't be more excited about the new addition to our family."

Being a mom mirrors Alba's role in the fourth installment of "Spy Kids." Both she and her character, Marissa, have new babies in their lives, but that's where the similarities end. Marissa is a retired secret agent and when she is pulled back in to action, she brings her two stepchildren along.

Prior to giving birth, Alba, 30, sat down with Reuters to talk about the film, her career and motherhood.

Q: This is the first time you've played a mother on the big screen. Did being a real-life mom have anything to do with wanting to be a part of this project?

A: "Yeah. I probably wouldn't have done this movie if I wasn't a mom already. So I definitely wanted to do the movie because of (3-year-old Honor). She inspired me to want to do that."

Q: Your character juggles a lot in the film between a new born, step-kids and a career. Did that ring true for you?

A: "That's definitely one of the topics that ('Spy Kids' filmmaker) Robert Rodriguez and I talk about a lot and how much time flies when you have kids -- he has five! All of a sudden they're on two or three milestones down the road. You're like, 'Wait! When did they start doing that?' I can certainly relate to that. And I certainly relate to trying to juggle and balance work and family life."

Q: With another little one on the way, that will add a whole new set of variables.

A: "I feel like I'm just getting my footing as a woman and just feeling comfortable in my choices. It's a challenge to figure out how much is too much work or not enough. Or if I'm giving up so much that I'm not going to have the opportunities that I would have if I worked a little bit more. I don't know. But my focus is Honor's happiness. If she's cool, I think everything will fall in to place."

Q: How did "Spy Kids" come your way?

A: "I was talking to Robert after I had Honor about how I'd really like to do a kids movie and how I'd love to do a movie that portrays a mom that's modern and cool. That's part of what this character is."

Q: You can't get a cooler mom than one who's a spy!

A: "(laughs) I really enjoyed doing the action sequences in the beginning of the movie. I haven't really done too much action since I did (the TV series ) 'Dark Angel,' so it was fun to do. I'm actually eager to do an action movie now -- a full action movie. I think that's what I'll be looking for next."

Q: Do you find that you're now making different career choices because you have children?

A: "(Before kids) my choices were to try and stay globally relevant and become relevant as a movie star. That's what my manager said! (laughs) I concentrated on movies that were going to be globally distributed and had a sufficient (advertising) budget, that were going to be a paycheck and where I was the lead. That was my focus for a lot of my career.

"After I had my daughter, that (goal) was not fulfilling creatively. I had worked with a lot of first time directors, which was fine, but there's only so much that you can learn as an actor from someone who's trying to find their way on set. Now it's about working with filmmakers that I look up to and that I feel are going to challenge me and take me to the next level as an actor."

Q: Have those projects come along yet?

A: "Yeah - working with Robert Rodriguez, Michael Winterbottom, whom I worked with (on 2010's 'The Killer Inside Me') and Paul Weitz with 'Little Fockers.' And Garry Marshall, even though I had just a little scene in 'Valentine's Day,' but nobody does romantic comedies like Garry Marshall."

(Reporting by Zorianna Kit, Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


Yahoo! News

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Jessica Alba puts new baby kick in "Spy Kids" movie (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – It's been a busy week in the home of Jessica Alba and her husband Cash Warren, and it's about to get busier.

Alba gave birth over the weekend to her second daughter, Haven Garner Warren, and this coming Friday, Alba's new movie, "Spy Kids: All the Time in the World 4D," lands in theaters.

"Cash and I are so excited to announce the birth of our daughter Haven Garner Warren," Alba posted on her Facebook page over the weekend. "She was born on Saturday, weighed 7 lbs. and 19 inches long. Healthy and happy! Big sister Honor couldn't be more excited about the new addition to our family."

Being a mom mirrors Alba's role in the fourth installment of "Spy Kids." Both she and her character, Marissa, have new babies in their lives, but that's where the similarities end. Marissa is a retired secret agent and when she is pulled back in to action, she brings her two stepchildren along.

Prior to giving birth, Alba, 30, sat down with Reuters to talk about the film, her career and motherhood.

Q: This is the first time you've played a mother on the big screen. Did being a real-life mom have anything to do with wanting to be a part of this project?

A: "Yeah. I probably wouldn't have done this movie if I wasn't a mom already. So I definitely wanted to do the movie because of (3-year-old Honor). She inspired me to want to do that."

Q: Your character juggles a lot in the film between a new born, step-kids and a career. Did that ring true for you?

A: "That's definitely one of the topics that ('Spy Kids' filmmaker) Robert Rodriguez and I talk about a lot and how much time flies when you have kids -- he has five! All of a sudden they're on two or three milestones down the road. You're like, 'Wait! When did they start doing that?' I can certainly relate to that. And I certainly relate to trying to juggle and balance work and family life."

Q: With another little one on the way, that will add a whole new set of variables.

A: "I feel like I'm just getting my footing as a woman and just feeling comfortable in my choices. It's a challenge to figure out how much is too much work or not enough. Or if I'm giving up so much that I'm not going to have the opportunities that I would have if I worked a little bit more. I don't know. But my focus is Honor's happiness. If she's cool, I think everything will fall in to place."

Q: How did "Spy Kids" come your way?

A: "I was talking to Robert after I had Honor about how I'd really like to do a kids movie and how I'd love to do a movie that portrays a mom that's modern and cool. That's part of what this character is."

Q: You can't get a cooler mom than one who's a spy!

A: "(laughs) I really enjoyed doing the action sequences in the beginning of the movie. I haven't really done too much action since I did (the TV series ) 'Dark Angel,' so it was fun to do. I'm actually eager to do an action movie now -- a full action movie. I think that's what I'll be looking for next."

Q: Do you find that you're now making different career choices because you have children?

A: "(Before kids) my choices were to try and stay globally relevant and become relevant as a movie star. That's what my manager said! (laughs) I concentrated on movies that were going to be globally distributed and had a sufficient (advertising) budget, that were going to be a paycheck and where I was the lead. That was my focus for a lot of my career.

"After I had my daughter, that (goal) was not fulfilling creatively. I had worked with a lot of first time directors, which was fine, but there's only so much that you can learn as an actor from someone who's trying to find their way on set. Now it's about working with filmmakers that I look up to and that I feel are going to challenge me and take me to the next level as an actor."

Q: Have those projects come along yet?

A: "Yeah - working with Robert Rodriguez, Michael Winterbottom, whom I worked with (on 2010's 'The Killer Inside Me') and Paul Weitz with 'Little Fockers.' And Garry Marshall, even though I had just a little scene in 'Valentine's Day,' but nobody does romantic comedies like Garry Marshall."

(Reporting by Zorianna Kit, Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


Yahoo! News

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Film buffs eye movie locations in Brooklyn (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – From an old-world Italian restaurant where Leonardo DiCaprio ate to the bakery where Cher found love, a New York tour company is taking movie fans to see where their favorite films were shot -- in Brooklyn.

Photographs of DiCaprio and director Martin Scorsese are proudly displayed in the window of Ferdinando's Foccaceria restaurant, a location for the 2006 film "The Departed," which won the Academy Award for best picture.

The fact that "The Departed" was set in Boston makes it an even more exciting find.

"Brooklyn is now the 'it' borough and people are not as interested in big bad Manhattan as much anymore," said Pauline Gacanja, spokesperson for On Location Tours Inc. "People are always surprised about how many movies have been filmed there."

The four-hour Brooklyn TV & Movie tour, which begins in lower Manhattan before crossing into Brooklyn, showcases the bridges, restaurants and brownstones featured on the small and big screens.

"It was great seeing where 'Moonstruck' was filmed," Tessa Benjamin, 38, of Dallas, Texas said about the 1987 film for which Cher won an Oscar for best actress in the romantic comedy that also starred Nicolas Cage.

Benjamin's 13-year old daughter was just as excited to see a house in a quaint neighborhood that featured in "Remember Me", the movie starring teen heart-throb Robert Pattinson.

The tour includes more than 40 locations such as the historic Brooklyn Bridge, which featured prominently in the 1971 film "The French Connection," which won the Best Picture Oscar, the courthouse seen in "American Gangster" and the bakery made famous in "Moonstruck".

The critically acclaimed Prohibition-era HBO show, "Boardwalk Empire," that is set in Atlantic City, New Jersey, has also been shot in Brooklyn.

Most of the On Location Tours, including "Sex and the City Hotspots," "Gossip Girl Sites" and "Soprano Sites," are concentrated in the more recognizable Manhattan. The company also offers tours in Washington D.C., and Boston.

An early popular stop in the Brooklyn tour is Junior's Restaurant, a New York tradition that claims to have the world's most fabulous cheesecake.

The restaurant is where Carrie Bradshaw, who is played by Sarah Jessica Parker, and friends shot her wedding reception in the first "Sex and the City" film, which delighted many women on the tour. They found the mini-cheesecake that each received at the stop even more exciting.

"People really enjoy themselves," said tour guide and actor Amadeo Fusca, who shared his knowledge about the films and inside industry information and behind-the-scene scoops with the tour guests.

"Everyone loves the movies and they love to see these places up-close," he said.

(Reporting by Paula Rogo; Edited by Patricia Reaney)


Yahoo! News

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Drew Peterson tries to stop movie about him (AP)

CHICAGO – Drew Peterson, a former police officer charged with murdering his third wife and suspected in the disappearance of his fourth, joked that he'd rather see Denzel Washington play him than Rob Lowe when he heard there would be a television movie about him. Now, though, he wants to pull the plug on the project.

Walter Maksym, a lawyer for Peterson, sent letters Wednesday to Lifetime Entertainment Services, Lowe and others involved with the movie demanding that they stop production because they have no legal right to use Peterson's name, likeness or story without Peterson's approval.

"There are right to publicity statutes in every state that you have the right to use your name, persona, likeness, and life story for commercial purposes and nobody else can use that unless they get your written permission," said Walter Maksym, who said he sent out 18 letters. Peterson, he said, has never been asked for his permission.

Peterson, who was an officer in the Chicago suburb of Bolingbrook, is charged with murder in the 2004 bathtub drowning of his third wife, Kathleen Savio. He is also a suspect, though he has not been charged, in the 2007 disappearance of his fourth wife, Stacy, who is presumed dead by investigators.

Peterson has been in jail since he was arrested in May 2009. He maintains his innocence in both his third wife's death and fourth wife's disappearance.

Maksym also alleges in his letter that the movie defames Peterson, who has not been convicted, because it is based on a book that is "nothing more than a deliberate and calculated assemblage of falsehoods constituting a character assassination ... to falsely and intentionally insinuate that my client is a despicable wife murderer."

A spokesman for Lifetime Entertainment, Les Eisner, declined to comment on the letter.

But Joe Hosey, who wrote "Fatal Vows: The Tragic Wives of Sergeant Drew Peterson," defended the book as accurate, saying neither Peterson nor his attorneys have identified any errors. In fact, he said, his reporting was borne out by testimony during a lengthy court hearing regarding the murder charges in the Savio case.

"The testimony from several witnesses was word for word printed in my book well before that hearing took place," said Hosey. "Under oath, they gave the same account that I had when I thoroughly researched my book."

A judge ultimately ruled that much of that hearsay testimony could not be used at trial — a ruling that is now before an appellate court — but Hosey said that nobody has ever proven that the witnesses lied, that what they told him is what they told the court.

Kelli Sager, a prominent Los Angeles media lawyer who is not involved in the dispute, said it's unlikely Peterson's claim would hold up in court.

"The law's very well established on this — the First Amendment allows filmmakers, authors, TV producers, and the like to publish unauthorized biographies, and the "right of publicity" is trumped by the constitution," she wrote in an email Thursday.

Dave Heller, an attorney with the Media Law Resource Center in New York who also is not connected to the dispute, said the statute Maksym based his argument on is geared toward preventing the unauthorized commercial use of a person's likeness, and that it wouldn't apply here.

"Right of publicity claims are defined and intended to stop the use of celebrities or other people's names in commercial advertising, and movies, like the news, are not generally considered commercial advertising," he said, adding that unauthorized movies and books are produced all the time about people without their permission.

Heller said Peterson could have a legal claim if he can prove the film "departs from the known facts and is defamatory." But he said, "They don't have a claim over an accurate portrayal of real life events."

The movie has received a fair amount of publicity in recent weeks, including a People Magazine story, that includes a photograph of Lowe, made up to look like Peterson, which explains how the actor "goes through a nine-hour transformation every day" to make him resemble Peterson.

When first told of the movie, Peterson, through his attorneys, joked about Lowe playing him. At the same time, one of his attorneys, Joel Brodsky, said he hoped that Lifetime, which is making the movie, would not rely on Hosey's book, which he characterized as biased and inaccurate.

And Maksym said that the reason Peterson did not want to file a lawsuit over the book was because he did not want to be forced to testify in a civil case before his criminal trial "because the state would use what he said" when he ultimately stood trial.

"We will do that later," he said.

Maksym said that even if he cannot halt production of the movie, which, he said is already being filmed, he is confident that if those involved with the production ignore his letter and he ultimately files a lawsuit that he can prevent the movie from being aired. He said that if he does not receive an answer to his letter by the end of next week that he will file a lawsuit before the end of the month.


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Thursday, July 7, 2011

Scary movie "Dream House" loses ratings appeal (Reuters)

By Joshua L. Weinstein Joshua L. Weinstein – Wed Jul 6, 7:56 pm ET

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap) – "Dream House," a thriller starring real-life newlyweds Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz, has lost a bid to have its "R" rating softened.

The appeals board of the Motion Picture Assn. of America said Wednesday that the movie merited the rating -- which requires U.S. viewers under 17 to be accompanied by an adult -- because of "some violence."

The film's producer still believes it will ultimately receive a PG-13 rating.

"They gave us a list of several things in the movie that they thought should be cut," Greg Mielcarz, Morgan Creek's executive VP of marketing, told TheWrap. "We're going to ... work with them together to ensure that we receive a PG-13."

The Universal Pictures release revolves around a family who discover that their new home was the murder scene of a mother and her children. It was directed by Jim Sheridan, and is set for release on September 30.

In order to have a rating changed, two-thirds of the members of the appeals board have to agree that the rating is "clearly erroneous." The MPAA says that the board reviews between 800 and 900 films each year and that fewer than a dozen ratings are appealed each year.

(Edited by Dean Gooodman)

(To read more about our entertainment news, visit our blog "Fan Fare" online at http://blogs.reuters.com/fanfare/)


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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

New George Clooney movie to open Venice Festival (AP)

VENICE, Italy – George Clooney's highly anticipated new movie about a U.S. presidential campaign will open this year's Venice Film Festival.

"The Ides of March" stars Clooney, Ryan Gosling, Paul Giamatti and Philip Seymour Hoffman.

Festival organizers said Wednesday that the movie will be competing for the coveted Golden Lion award. The film will have its world premiere screening on Aug. 31 following the festival's opening ceremony.

The festival runs through Sept.10.

The Oscar-winning Clooney has often attended the Venice film fest. The Hollywood star has a villa on Lake Como and an Italian girlfriend.


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Friday, June 17, 2011

Debbie Reynolds selling historic movie costumes (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – If you ever wanted to relive the movie scene in which Marilyn Monroe's dress is blown upwards by a burst of air, you will get a chance on Saturday when her gown from "The Seven Year Itch" goes on auction.

Expect to fork over at least $1 million to $2 million for the ivory rayon-acetate halter dress with pleated skirt, one of about 500 wardrobe items being offloaded by actress and lifetime collector Debbie Reynolds at a Beverly Hills sale.

The so-called "subway grate" dress is the jewel in a collection that includes costumes previously worn by the likes of Grace Kelly, Natalie Wood, Elizabeth Taylor, Audrey Hepburn, Marlon Brando, Julie Andrews and Madonna.

And Mike Myers. One of his shagadelic "Austin Powers" combos, a groovy blood-orange number, is on the block for a relatively modest estimate of $6,000 to $8,000.

Reynolds, 79, has been collecting costumes since her early days as a contract actress at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, where she spent her spare time in the wardrobe department watching the artisans create movie history with needles and thread.

When the cash-strapped Hollywood studios started selling off their movie props in the 1970s, Reynolds presciently scooped up the best items. She used her connections to buy many items before they went on auction.

The dream was to display the 3,000-odd costumes in a museum, but that never came to fruition. A planned project in Tennessee went bankrupt in 2009, and a heartbroken Reynolds was forced to sell her beloved collection to pay back creditors. Several sales are planned.

"As I turn these precious items over to the auction, my wish is that they will find homes where they will be revered and preserved along with their history," Reynolds said.

Among the items are nine dresses that Reynolds wore in such films as "The Unsinkable Molly Brown," "How the West Was Won" and "Singin' in the Rain."

Prices for entertainment memorabilia have not been affected by the recession, so many of the estimates will likely be easily exceeded. Perhaps the real test of buyers' appetites will be what amounts to a heap of dirty rags: a tattered brown robe worn by Charlton Heston in "Planet of the Apes" is expected to fetch $8,000 to $12,000.

Also up for grabs at the Profiles in History sale are:

- Monroe's red-sequined dress from "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" ($200,000 to $300,000);

- Hepburn's Cecil Beaton-designed Ascot dress from "My Fair Lady" ($200,000-$300,000);

- replicas of Judy Garland's blue cotton dress ($60,000-$80,000) and ruby slippers ($120,000-$150,000) used in test shots for "The Wizard of Oz";

- an elaborate coronation costume worn by Brando in "Napoleon Bonaparte" ($60,000-$80,000);

- the "Do-Re-Mi" dress worn by Andrews in "The Sound of Music" ($40,000-$60,000);

- Kelly's rose crepe outfit from "To Catch a Thief" ($30,000-$50,000);

- an ivory military suit worn by Claude Rains in his Oscar-nominated "Casablanca" role as Captain Louis Renault ($12,000-$15,000);

- Taylor's brown period dress from "Raintree County" ($10,000-$15,000);

- Madonna's black evening gown and shoes from "Evita" ($4,000-$6,000);

- Wood's real-life high-school graduation dress ($2,000-$3,000).

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Nichola Groom)


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Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Eminem boxing movie lures "Training Day" director (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Eminem's first movie since "8 Mile" is one step closer to happening.

"Southpaw," a boxing movie in which Eminem would play a welterweight champ who punches his way back to glory after a tragedy, now looks to be zeroing on "Training Day" director Antoine Fuqua to take the helm.

Fuqua, who is currently shooting a biopic in China centering on concubine Yang Guifei, is in talks to board the pugilist picture, which is hoping for a fall start.

DreamWorks picked up the project in December when another boxing movie, "The Fighter," was burning up the box office and awards season buzz. It was written by "Sons of Anarchy" creator Kirk Sutter.

Eminem played himself in 2002's autobiographical "8 Mile," and won an Oscar for co-writing the theme song.


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Monday, June 6, 2011

Robert Pattinson sinks teeth into MTV Movie Awards (AP)

By SANDY COHEN and DERRIK J. LANG, AP Entertainment Writers Sandy Cohen And Derrik J. Lang, Ap Entertainment Writers – Mon Jun 6, 12:08 am ET

UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. – The MTV Movie Awards was more like "The Team Edward Show."

"Twilight" star Robert Pattinson sucked up the spotlight — and some popcorn-shaped trophies — at Sunday's shenanigan-packed ceremony. Among the goofy actor's moments: winning three different awards, unexpectedly kissing co-star Taylor Lautner, and slipping the F-word past censors when presenting Reese Witherspoon with the special MTV Generation Award.

"It's not always a bad thing to have sexual chemistry with your mother," joked Pattinson, who played the son of Witherspoon's character in "Vanity Fair" and her love interest in "Water for Elephants."

For his role as vampire Edward Cullen in "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse," Pattinson won best male performance, best fight with Bryce Dallas Howard and Xavier Samuel, and best kiss with Kristen Stewart. Instead of smooching each other, Pattinson declared he didn't "feel like kissing" Stewart before he descended back into the audience and planted his lips on Lautner.

Team Jacob also earned some love from "Saturday Night Live" star Jason Sudeikis, the show's host, who kicked off the silly ceremony at the Gibson Amphitheater by starring in his own version of "The Hangover" in which he went in search of a lost Lautner. The other "Twilight" winners were Stewart for best female performance and "Eclipse" for best movie.

"Natalie, sorry, but the popcorn is mine," Stewart said mockingly, referencing fellow nominee Natalie Portman, who won the best actress Oscar earlier this year for "Black Swan."

It was the third straight year that "Twilight" eclipsed the competition with the most wins at the fan-favorite ceremony. Last year, "New Moon," the second installment of the "Twilight" film franchise, also earned awards for best movie, best kiss, best female performance and best male performance.

"The fact that we're standing up here is a testament to all the hard work that went into `Eclipse,'" Lautner said.

The non-vampire winners who picked up awards Sunday included Emma Stone for best comedic performance for "Easy A," Justin Bieber for best jaw dropping moment for "Justin Bieber: Never Say Never," Alexys Nycole Sanchez for best line for "Grown Ups," and Tom Felton for best villain for "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1."

"This will look very nice in my downstairs toilet," Felton said of his trophy. "Thank you."

The ceremony was filled with several awkward moments. Sudeikis spent most of his opening monologue cracking jokes about the revelations that Arnold Schwarzenegger fathered a child with a housekeeper. He also poked fun at singer-actress Selena Gomez, who embarrassingly hid her face from the cameras as he scolded her for kissing fellow teen sensation Bieber and swallowing "three of his baby teeth." Later, Mila Kunis and Justin Timberlake cupped each other's genitals while presenting Pattinson with the best male performance trophy.

"I really didn't think I was going to win," Pattinson said during his acceptance speech. "Zac Efron was crying and stuff in that little clip."

The show also served as a promotional platform for Hollywood studios' upcoming films as much as it did as an awards ceremony. Emma Watson, J.J. Abrams, Steven Spielberg and Elle Fanning were among the celebrities on hand to present sneak peeks at "Super 8," "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2" and "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part One."

___

Online:

http://movieawards.mtv.com


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Monday, May 30, 2011

William, Kate TV movie being shot in Romania (AP)

By ALINA WOLFE MURRAY, Associated Press Alina Wolfe Murray, Associated Press – Mon May 30, 4:41 am ET

BUCHAREST, Romania – Barely a month after their fairy-tale wedding, a new film depicting the budding romance of Prince William and Kate Middleton is being rushed out for television viewers.

A mixture of fact and fiction, "William & Kate: A Royal Love Story" is expected to be released in August on the Hallmark Channel.

Director Linda Yellen took some time out from filming at MediaPro Studios in Romania to speak with The Associated Press. The American was also producer of CBS's "The Royal Romance of Charles and Diana" in 1982, a film that had a huge audience at the time.

"William & Kate" is more than a romance — it's also "a psychological story of the memory of the mother, in this case Princess Diana, and her legacy," Yellen said. The film shows how William "has to choose to live his life with her memory and with the decisions he has to make," including the decision of whom to marry.

The couple was married April 29 in a lavish ceremony at Westminster Abbey watched by millions. Filming began in early May and AP Television cameras were given exclusive access to the set.

Yellen, who met Princess Diana three times, called the movie "a very personal story. In a way, it's my tribute to her as well as a tribute to the young couple."

Yellen, whose father died on the first day of shooting the film, said her loss made her better understand some of the scenes where William communicates with his mother in a spiritual way. She wrote the script in two weeks, after she saw William had given Diana's ring to Middleton.

"The whole story came to me in that moment," she said.

While using real events and words that were told in real life, there are also dialogues she's written and situations she imagined. One such scene depicts William's 21st birthday party, with Kate and William dancing together as Queen Elizabeth II looks on. Guests are dressed in vividly colored African costumes with tables laid for a feast in a large hall with ornate arcades. There are statues of elephants and potted palm trees in the background as Kate and William are having fun — and falling in love.

British actress Alice St. Clair, who plays Middleton, said the film — her first — is a series of snapshots of the relationship between the couple and tracks their developing friendship. She said it shows how William is attracted to Kate, with whom he shares a sense of humor, because she challenges him and is very competitive.

St. Clair, who has short hair but wears extensions for the movie, acknowledges she was not "a carbon-copy of Kate." "We were not trying to mimic her but ... to show the essence of her and bring my own self into it," the actress, wearing a blue gown and fascinator, said during a break from filming.

American actor Dan Amboyer, who plays William, called the film "a modern fairy tale." Amboyer, who made his debut in the "Law & Order" series, said the "script is smart, is fun, there is real wit between them. It's not at all schmaltzy."

In the film, the two meet by chance when William bumps into Kate who was carrying laundry. Amboyer said his character learns from her about ordinary things such as cooking a meal or doing the laundry. There are friends, parties, the breakup, the makeup and of course the British royal family.

Oscar-nominated Jane Alexander is Queen Elizabeth II, a grandmother pondering whether Kate is right for Will and for the throne.

"We don't show a lot of disapproval or doubt," she said, "but you see her (the queen) questioning Kate about her public speaking, about what she calls training."

"I think she is trying to make sure that what happened with Diana and Charles does not happen with Kate and Will," Alexander said.


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Thursday, May 19, 2011

Indian movie star Rajnikanth hospitalized (AP)

NEW DELHI – The Indian movie star Rajnikanth has been hospitalized with stomach and respiratory infections but is recovering.

His wife Latha Rajnikanth says the actor has been in the hospital in the southern Indian city of Chennai for a week and was recently moved to the intensive care unit.

She told reporters on Thursday that her husband first complained of dehydration and a stomach infection and later developed a respiratory infection.

A statement from the Sri Ramachandra Medical Center said the star was admitted on May 13 and put in intensive care on Wednesday where he was responding well to treatment.

The 60-year-old has acted in more than 175 films since 1975. He is one of India's biggest movie stars, especially in Tamil and Telugu films in southern India.


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Rob Zombie plots next album, talks next movie (Reuters)

DETROIT (Billboard) – He may not get to it for a while with a new film project looming, but Rob Zombie is starting to hatch plans for his next album.

Zombie told Billboard.com that he and guitarist John5 have already begun talking about the follow-up to last year's "Hellbilly Deluxe 2," with expectations that "it will probably be the best record we've done in a long time. After I broke away from the music for a while and came back when John joined, it's been like this weird rebuilding process.

He continued: "I feel like this year we've really kind of brought the band back to where it needs to be, so I really feel like, even though we haven't done anything yet, the next record is going to be a special one."

Zombie predicted the extended gestation period will benefit the album once the group -- which now includes former Marilyn Manson drummer Ginger Fish -- hits the studio.

"I used to really conceptualize albums far in advance," Zombie explained. "It wasn't like, 'Go write a bunch of songs...' We would really plan things out in advance, and that's sort of what we're doing now. So I'm excited."

Zombie will be spending the first part of the summer on tour, staring with a short California-Nevada run on May 25 in Ventura before going to Europe in June and July and then an 11-date Hell on Earth Tour with Slayer that begins July 20 in Reading, Pa.

After Hell on Earth, Zombie will be focusing on "The Lords of Salem," a horror film he wrote and will direct about 20 innocent people burned as witches during the 18th century that return to Salem to get their revenge.

"I'm very excited about this one," Zombie said of his sixth feature and the follow-up to 2007's "Halloween II" and 2009's animated "The Haunted World of El Superbeasto." "It's a very different film. It's more of a slow, psychological burn as opposed to a physically violent kind of movie."

His special effects crew has already started working on the project, and with casting and location scouting on the horizon, Zombie expects filming and production to last into 2012.

Meanwhile, Zombie has been busy with other directing duties. He recently rode heard on "Tom Papa: Live in New York City" for Comedy Central, which is Papa's first-ever stand-up special, and he directed a TV commercial for Woolite detergent, which was filmed in Vancouver after his recent Australian tour.

"I just wanted the experience of doing something like that," Zombie says of the latter. "I don't know if I'll do more commercials, but I always like to do one of anything so I know what it's about. Anything like that I always find interesting because you always learn something, and you want to have as many skills that you can bring to anything as possible."

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)


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