7/27/2550

MOVIE : The Simpsons, Bigger and Better

The Simpsons, Bigger and Better


In episode 607 of South Park, Butters, in his guise as Professor Chaos, dreams up a host of insidious schemes—blocking out the sun, decapitating a South Park statue, selling the town a monorail—only to be told that these had already been spun out on a certain animated TV series. "How come every time I think of something clever," Butters asks, "The Simpsons already did it?"


The episode was a tribute from one cadre of cartoon geniuses—South Park's Trey Parker and Matt Stone—to another, earlier one: Matt Groening, James L. Brooks and their team of highly educated misfits, who developed Groening's crudely drawn one-minute Tracey Ullman Show vignettes of a chinless yellow family into a half-hour sitcom, nay, a veritable comedy cosmos that this fall begins its record-breaking 19th season on Fox.

Once they had produced 400 shows and run a zillion variations on Homer's Brobdingnagian stupidity, Marge's slow burn, Bart's overachieving impishness, Lisa's displaced intelligence and Maggie's muteness, The Simpsons' caretakers faced another challenge. How could they expand 22 min. of content into a coherent, cholerically funny, 87-min., worth-paying-for laff riot shown on a wall in a mall? And beyond how—why? Maybe because Parker and Stone had proved it could be done, splendidly, with their 1999 South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut. Anyway, here's The Simpsons Movie. It was worth waiting for.

In an ecologically threatened Springfield, Homer fouls the local lake with the refuse of a pig he's fallen in love with. The place is declared a disaster area, and an evil government bureaucrat orders that the town be domed. Having alienated everyone with his idiocy, Homer must prove himself a hero: "Risking my life—to save people I hate—for reasons I don't really understand."

The film, written by 11 guys, and directed by David Silverman in the old-fashioned, hand-drawn way, looks surprisingly spiffy on the big screen. It's rated PG-13 (for brief frontal nudity), but vulgarity was never the envelope The Simpsons pushed. Its goal was density, comic congestion, the vacuum-packing of cool gags and grotesque-sympathetic characters into the shortest span possible.

The little miracle of the movie is that this plays out at four times the length without giving you a headache. The film finds its own pace, and it keeps its personality. It doesn't try to be ruder or kinkier, just bigger and better. It follows a rule Brooks laid down at the beginning of the series: Don't be afraid to show emotion. Audience, that goes for you too when you watch Homer and Marge's worst ever marital crisis. Sob away unabashedly.
So, for those of you who were wondering if a great TV show could top itself at feature-film length, the good news is that The Simpsons did it! But South Park did it first.








Source : http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1647331,00.html

7/19/2550

Potter Marks a Generation of Readers

Potter Marks a Generation of Readers

They were just learning to instant-message their friends when Harry Potter got his first owl from Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

As they were using their freshly minted licenses to drive to school — stopping for that status-symbol Frappuccino on the way — Harry was meeting his estranged godfather Sirius Black.

When they were already stalking old boyfriends and girlfriends through MySpace and Facebook, Harry was getting his first kiss, battling evil wizards and discovering a prophecy about his future.

And in a few days, a generation of children who grew up with the Harry Potter series will learn the fate author J.K. Rowling has for the boy wizard who was with them through it all.

Makenzie Greenblatt, a 20-year-old student at the University of Washington, began reading Harry Potter in 1999 when she received the first book in the series for Chanukah. Back then, people barely knew the significance of a lightening shaped scar when her friend's little brother dressed up as the boy who lived for Halloween. Now the cultural boom is inescapable.

"It's been weird to watch the phenomenon of it spread and to see how big it's become," Greenblatt said, dressed in a witches hat, cape and Harry Potter shirt at the recent midnight premiere of "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" in Seattle.

In the past decade, Greenblatt and her peers hoarded every word of Rowling's unfolding series for the past decade. Now they're in college or at their first jobs, but their love of the wizarding world has not abated.

"Harry Potter is part of a shared cultural heritage. It serves as a touchstone for their experience that they can look back on, and binds them as a group culturally and generationally," said Philip Nel, an associate professor of English Kansas State University who teaches a course on Harry Potter and wrote "J.K.

Rowling's Harry Potter Novels: A Reader's Guide."

Meeting someone who hasn't read the books, or at least watched a movie is weird for Terra Morgan, a 21-year-old University of Washington student who sat next to Greenblatt at the movie, wearing a Gryffindor-style gold and crimson striped scarf. For Morgan, Harry Potter is more than a book series.

"It's social more than anything else because everyone knows about it," Morgan said.

In fact, Morgan and Greenblatt met while creating a Harry Potter style competition for the drama department at the University of Washington.

After the sixth book in the series, "Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince," came out two years ago, Matt Hungerford, a 19-year-old student at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, spent a week discussing plot nuances with his friends.

"I think in five or 10 years when people look back it will definitely be something people remember," Hungerford said. "I can't think of any other books that have captured more attention than this."

For Sarah Harper, a 19-year-old student at Centenary College of Louisiana, reading the series through her adolescence was like growing up with Harry.

"At 15 his experiences were very similar to my experiences in a weird way. Except I wasn't fighting evil wizards all the time," Harper said.

Many readers feel a similar connection, said Nancy Pearl, author of "Book Lust."

"One of the things for people who did come of age as Harry came of age is that the increased complexity of the books made it worth their while to keep reading," Pearl said.

She compared the Harry Potter books to other cultural milestones, such as "Star Wars" in the 1970s.

"It's as much a cultural icon as cell phones and the Internet," Pearl said.

As the hours countdown to midnight Saturday, members of the Potter generation are preparing for the end of a decade-long affair.

Some plan to reread the series. Caroline Reaves, a 19-year-old student at Colby College in Waterville, Maine, sped through all 885,943 words of the first six books in 24 hours to prepare for book seven. She said she might slow down her reading speed to savor the last book.

Emerson Spartz, creator of the popular Potter site Mugglenet.com, said the last pages of the books would be bittersweet.

"Each page is going to be like a death clock counting down," Spartz said.

After the last page is turned, what do Potterphiles do next?

"We read them again, and again, and again," Greenblatt said.


Source : http://entertainment.msn.com/news/article.aspx?news=269364

'Sopranos' picks up 15 Emmy nominations

'Sopranos' picks up 15 Emmy nominations

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- "The Sopranos," the mob series that went to its grave with a shockingly inconclusive finale, found a happy ending Thursday with 15 Emmy nominations including best drama.

"The Sopranos" is up for 15 Emmy nominations, including best drama.

The made-for-TV movie "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" led all nominees with 17 bids.
James Gandolfini, who played the emotionally conflicted mob boss on HBO's "The Sopranos," and Edie Falco, who played his wife, both received top acting nominations.

The other best-drama series were "Boston Legal," "Grey's Anatomy," "House" and freshman sci-fi sensation "Heroes."

Another freshman hit, "Ugly Betty," based on a Colombian telenovela, made it into the ranks of best comedy series nominees. It's joined by "Entourage," "30 Rock," "Two and a Half Men" and last year's winner in the category, "The Office."

"Ugly Betty" star America Ferrera was recognized with a nomination for her starring role.

Joining Gandolfini among lead drama series actor nominees were Hugh Laurie of "House," Denis Leary of "Rescue Me," James Spader of "Boston Legal" and last year's winner Kiefer Sutherland of "24." Last year's drama series was "24" but it was snubbed this time.

Falco will compete with Patricia Arquette of "Medium," Minnie Driver of "The Riches," Sally Field of "Brothers & Sisters," Kyra Sedgwick of "The Closer" and last year's winner, Mariska Hargitay of "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit."

Sedgwick got the news immediately. She helped announce bids for the 59th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards in a brief ceremony at the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences' Leonard H. Goldenson Theatre.
"Friday Night Lights," the critically acclaimed but low-rated high school football drama that needed an Emmy boost, failed to gain major nominations.

"The Sopranos," which premiered in January 1999 and had an on-and-off cable run, capped its final episode this year with an ambiguous ending that left fans in the dark about the fate of lead character Tony Soprano, last seen sitting in a diner with his wife and children. A suddenly black screen suggested sudden violence -- or not.

The series' other nominees included Michael Imperioli, who received a bid for best supporting dramatic actor for his role as the ill-fated Christopher. Aida Turturro, who played Tony's tough sister Janice, and Lorraine Bracco, who co-starred as his conflicted psychiatrist Dr. Melfi, were nominated for supporting actress.

Travolta's Latest Comeback


Portrait of actor John Travolta photographed in Los Angeles, CA.

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John Travolta is talking about the allure of the classic Hollywood stars—their knack for establishing immediate intimacy with the audience. He mentions Barbara Stanwyck, who played the toughest, smartest broads of the '30s and '40s and who received an honorary Oscar in 1982, presented by Travolta. "If you'd met Stanwyck," he explains, "she would have crushed you with her ability to adore and adorn you, almost like a Southern belle." Then, to the journalist he's met only an hour before, Travolta says, "Stand up." When a movie star of three decades' eminence tells me to rise, I obey, and I'm now facing Travolta, nearly nose to nose. He clamps me in a python embrace. His blue eyes and soft voice start to flutter. "Oh, you came here to give me my Oscar!" he whispers in a dewy approximation of Stanwyck's purr to Henry Fonda in The Lady Eve (right before she devours him). Without easing his grip on me—he's still in the moment 25 years ago—he says in his own voice, "And I'm standing here thinking, 'She's an 80-year-old woman, and I am captivated.'"

And I'm standing there thinking, I am a captive. But a willing one. Though I'm startled at having been spot-cast to play Travolta to his Stanwyck, I'm also tickled by what his actress wife Kelly Preston, who a few minutes before served us iced tea and scones, might find a curious sight: one middle-aged, heavyset man bear-hugging another. In a way, Travolta's giving me an in-person demonstration of the intimate bond he has created with moviegoers and is ever ready to display. "I have a tacit agreement with the audience," he tells me when we return to our respective couches, "that 'John's gonna do this thing now, and it'll entertain us.'"

And it's not as if Travolta—the sultry young stud of Saturday Night Fever and Grease, the wily thug of Pulp Fiction, Get Shorty and Face/Off—hasn't been up close with another guy recently. In his new movie, Hairspray, based on the 1988 John Waters comedy and the 2002-Tony-winning musical, he does a funny-passionate dance with Christopher Walken. And Walken leads. Travolta, walking in the pumps of Divine in the earlier film and Harvey Fierstein on Broadway, plays Edna Turnblad, the beyond-zaftig Baltimore mom of a '60s teenage girl who dreams of appearing on a local TV dance show. (Walken is Edna's incorrigibly besotted husband.)
It's the most vivacious movie musical in ages, and Travolta is a big reason why. Encased in a foam-rubber fat suit, and channeling Blanche DuBois and Miss Piggy, he reveals his feminine side in a way that could have made Stanwyck smile in appreciation. And though Edna hasn't quite the agility of Saturday Night Fever's Tony Manero, Travolta is still a dancing champ at any weight.

Travolta hasn't sung in a musical in nearly 30 years, but he was practically born to the form. In the New York City suburb of Englewood, N.J., his Italian father Salvatore owned a tire shop, but his Irish mother Helen ran what John, the youngest of six, calls "the family business": show business. Mom directed local theater works; the other kids acted or studied music. John worked at becoming an actor-dancer-singer, and at 17 he almost won the title role in the Broadway Jesus Christ Superstar. The part he did get that year was in a summer theater revival of The Boy Friend. He has a word-perfect memory of the audition: "The producer, who was 93, said, 'There are people here who can sing and dance better than you. But nobody has as much fun on stage. I can't resist you. You're contagious. I am going to hire you because I have so much fun watching you.'"

The kid rose quickly through the ranks: Broadway debut at 20 in the World War II musical Over Here!, the lead role in the Broadway Grease at 21, TV fame as sexy Vinnie Barbarino on Welcome Back, Kotter at 22. Then the Fever struck. Travolta radiated old-time star quality in his first major film role; he had the strut, the moves and the blinding white suit to be a disco dreamboat. Six months after Saturday Night Fever, which had a boffo domestic box office of $94 million, came Grease, which earned twice that.

And six months after Grease: a stupendous flop, Moment by Moment ($11 million). He had endured the first big up-down in a notably seismic career. Urban Cowboy boom, Two of a Kind bust; Staying Alive a zig, Perfect a zag. The sassy-baby Look Who's Talking was his top grosser since Grease; then he had another recession until Pulp Fiction pegged him as the cool bad guy and won him a string of hits. Another soft phase set in until this year's comedy smash Wild Hogs.

As numerous as the turkeys he hatched are the hits he turned down. He essentially gave Richard Gere a career by saying no to Days of Heaven, American Gigolo, An Officer and a Gentleman and, two decades later, Chicago. By declining Splash, he gave Tom Hanks his big break. Again, Travolta regrets nothing: "I don't want to be the only male star in Hollywood!" Stars sometimes swap roles; Hanks got Travolta's part in The Green Mile, Travolta took over for Hanks in Primary Colors. "And I'm glad I did." As a near-Bill Clinton, in Mike Nichols' film of the Joe Klein novel, he showed how an indiscriminate application of charisma can be toxic to the recipient and the carrier.

Truth is, Travolta loves being a movie star: loves the acting, the recognition, the access it gave him to the legends he grew up venerating (Stanwyck, Cagney, Brando). He's got the houses in Florida and Maine, several planes he pilots, the gorgeous wife and two kids, Jett and Ella. In return, he's gracious to the fans— "If you're out there demanding attention from others, it's silly not to expect a little backflow"—and even the paparazzi. "I've never had trouble with photographers. You stand up there, you give them the 10 minutes they want, and there's no frenzy."
This openness helps explain why, though audiences may have often lost their interest in Travolta's films, they never lost their affection for him. He's so well liked that fans automatically edit out the discordant aspects of his big films—the gritty family animosity in Fever, the fact that he's killed halfway into Pulp Fiction (only to return in the time-warp finale)—and enjoy the villains he plays for their power, allure and brio.

Audiences also accept or indulge or ignore his prominent role in the Church of Scientology, the controversial belief and behavior system devised by science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard. Travolta, a Scientologist for 32 years, shepherded and starred in the 2000 fantasy Battlefield Earth, based on a Hubbard novel; the film was an egregious flop. Yet Travolta doesn't get the flak that wounds another famous Scientologist, Tom Cruise. As an activist and a personality, Travolta is Teflon, Cruise is Velcro.

"I think that'll all smooth out," Travolta says of the bumps in Cruise's rep, "because he's a good boy. Part of it is that his nature is more intense than mine. Our velocities are different. But we're talking about the same issue." Travolta says he doesn't impose Scientology on crew members, but he makes what he sees as his expertise available on the set. "If you feel you can help somebody, you have to try, the way I'd offer a drink to a thirsty man. But I don't force anything on anyone."

Maybe he trusts in his powers of seduction to convince people of the improbable. That's what lured him into Hairspray: the notion that he could make audiences believe he was a woman. Divine, Waters' female-impersonator muse, and Fierstein, with his mincing gestures and gravelly basso, had made Edna a working-class drag queen. Travolta had another idea, which he pitched to producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron and director Adam Shankman.

"I told them, 'I don't want to be a drag queen. I'm better at playing a character than playing a gimmick. I really want to be a woman—to be all the women I grew up watching in the movies.' It took some discussion, but I convinced them."

In every aspect of his character, from the authentic Baltimore accent to the costumes (fake mink stoles, not feather boas), Travolta says, "I was looking for realism within the surrealism. I was a kid in the early '60s, living in a neighborhood like Edna's. I know what people wanted a woman to look like. Not Phyllis Diller in Vegas; they wanted Sophia Loren, Anita Ekberg, Anna Magnani. So Edna needs to be voluptuous. She can't have a refrigerator build. Give her larger breasts, a larger ass, and don't forget the waist. She has to be pleasant looking. Make her Elizabeth Taylor gone to flesh."

He's quite a show, but he's not the whole show. Hairspray is an ensemble piece of many sleek, speedy parts. Nikki Blonsky, 17 when she started filming, is a wide tornado as Tracy Turnblad, would-be dance diva and unlikely civil rights leader. Michelle Pfeiffer, 50 and still an ice goddess, nails the venomous role of a princess past her prime, hating the young because she's no longer one of them. The biggest contributor is Shankman, who sets a high level of style and adrenaline and never lets up. If people can be corralled into seeing Hairspray, they should come out loving it.

It looks as if Travolta made the right choice for this movie. At 53, he's still juiced by a meaty role, still comfortable being a star. Is it something he can do for another three decades? As usual he takes his cue from the audience. "If I ever get the feeling that it's not interesting for them," he says, "I'll change my path somehow. But right now it's going nicely, don't you think?"

What can a commoner say to movie royalty? A reverent "Yes, Miss Stanwyck."


Source : http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1644719,00.html

Music : Singular sensation

Music

Singular sensation
By Suwitcha Chaiyong, Photo courtesy of True Fantasia
Patcha is ready to go solo

In 2005, the first runner-up of Academy Fantasia 2, Patcha Anek-Ayuwat, was outstanding on the reality show’s stage. Her powerful-yet-sweet voice never failed to blow the audience away, especially when she sang pop ballads.

Though she didn’t earn top honours in the contest, Patcha has been incredibly busy since she walked off the programme’s set.

So far, the 20-year-old actress and singer has released seven albums with her fellow AF contestants, acted in the TV series Pleun Rak Nak La Fun, had a lead role in the musical Ngern Ngern Ngern, performed the Thai voice of the penguin Gloria in the animated feature Happy Feet and pitched shampoo and a contact lenses in commercials.

Recently, Patcha finally had time in her busy schedule to release her first solo album, Patcha the Miracle 6.

LONELIEST NUMBER

The title of Patcha’s album refers to her number on the reality programme. She said that she believes six is her lucky number. She laughs at the idea that it’s an unlucky or even evil number.

“My number on Academy Fantasia was V6, and I’ve been lucky,” she said. “I don’t think six is an evil number. Mine is a single six — not triple six.”

The number six has been important for Patcha, but the number one is what she’s facing as a solo act. For more than a year, she had her fellow contestants and friends around while she performed. Now she has to prove that she can handle an audience all by herself.

“I feel a bit lonely, but this opportunity has encouraged me to take more responsibility. Nobody’s up on stage to help me anymore,” Patcha said. “I believe that audiences are waiting to see me. I’ll definitely try my best.”

SINGING STYLE

On her solo album, Patcha has toned down her powerful voice. She explained that she worked hard on vocal adjustments that would make her songs more approachable.

“On the show, I mostly sang songs that demonstrated the wide range of my voice,” she said. “This time I wanted to try singing songs that listeners could hum along to. If I have a chance to make another album, I may try something different.”


UPBEAT PERSONA

Patcha, currently a fourth-year student at Mahidol University’s College of Music, has learned a lot during her brief two years in showbiz. Keeping an open mind has helped a lot, she said.

“I’ve worked on many things so far. These experiences have helped me realise that I should be like an empty glass,” Patcha said. “I’ll keep an open mind that’s able to be filled up by learning something new.”

This singer also makes sure to keep upbeat attitude when she’s in the spotlight.
“I have to remind myself that many people know me, but I don’t know everyone,” she said. “Being a public figure is one of my responsibilities. I try to avoid letting people see me in a bad mood.”

Even with so much experience in the entertainment business, Patcha admitted that she still has a long way to go.

“I’ve tried a lot of things, but my skills are still basic,” she said. “Those were the first times that I had done a voice-over or acted in a play, but I want to do them again.

In the end, Patcha said that the talent she’s most famous for is the one that’s still closest to her heart.
“I’m most happy when I’m in concert,” she said. “Singing is always my favourite.”

7/12/2550

'Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix': A Rumor Of War, By Kurt Loder

'Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix': A Rumor Of War, By Kurt Loder
A new director ramps up the action in the teen-wizard saga.





"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" is the most rousing of the Potter films so far, and certainly one of the best. Right from the start — when Harry is attacked by way-off-their-turf Dementors — the director, David Yates, commits himself to movement, to whipping the story forward. There's a lot of action in the picture, but even when he gears down to focus on the series' bedrock themes of friendship, love and loyalty, Yates keeps hustling things along. There's very little narrative fat in the film; it's lean and gleaming.

You'll recall that at the end of the last movie, " Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) barely survived an encounter with the odious Lord Voldemort (snake-faced Ralph Fiennes). Unfortunately, there were no witnesses to this incident, and so now, as "Phoenix" opens, we find Harry being badmouthed throughout the wizarding world as a liar. The spineless Minister of Magic, Cornelius Fudge (Robert Hardy), refuses to believe that Voldemort, thought crushed 14 years ago, is back in action. The wizard newspaper, The Daily Prophet, parrots this line, as do most of its readers, including many of Harry's Hogwarts schoolmates.

(See what a handful of hard-core "Harry" fans had to say about the latest flick.)

Making things worse, Harry, faced with a no-choice situation, has utilized a magical charm in front of a Muggle — a serious offense. He's hauled before a Ministry of Magic tribunal and threatened with expulsion from Hogwarts. Fortunately, his protector, Headmaster Albus Dumbledore (Michael Gambon), although acting strangely these days, steps forth to argue Harry's case. Then things get worse yet.

Fudge installs one of his minions, a rulebook Nazi named Dolores Umbridge (Imelda Staunton), as Hogwarts' new teacher of Defense Against the Dark Arts. Umbridge is a giggling martinet in dowdy pink suits (Staunton is deliciously detestable in the role), and she decrees that, since Voldemort is not in fact back, the students need no longer be taught actual defensive magic. Appalled and rebellious, Harry and his pals Hermione (Emma Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint) persuade a group of fellow students to join them in forming Dumbledore's Army, an underground group dedicated to practicing wand work and charm-casting on their own. Infuriated by their insubordination, Umbridge seizes more and more power at the school, until she's soon running the place.

Meanwhile, of course, Voldemort is back, and he's after something that Harry has to find first in order to head off magical calamity.

By now, there are so many characters thronging the Potter saga that some of our favorites are getting crowded into the background. Beyond an occasional passing sneer, there's not a lot to be seen of the scheming Draco Malfoy (Tom Felton); and the lovable Hagrid (Robbie Coltrane) is gone a lot, consulting with faraway Giants.

Even the sublime Professor Snape (Alan Rickman) puts in limited appearances this time (although when you hear Rickman bite into a phrase like "extracting the last exquisite ounce of agony," you know he's still giving the part his total attention).

Fortunately, Radcliffe, now exuding a more muscular leading-man presence, has never been more solid, even though he's called upon to hyperventilate a bit too much as the movie barrels along. And two new characters more than justify their introduction into the story. The mad witch Belletrix Lestrange (Helena Bonham Carter) is uproariously vile; and a new Hogwarts student — adorable space-case Luna Lovegood (Evanna Lynch) — gently lights up every scene she's in. (Lynch is a Potter-loving non-actor who auditioned for the role because she felt she was born to play it, and every time her dreamy face floats into view, you realize she's right.)

Director Yates, probably best-known for his British TV work, strives with considerable success to exert control over a story that's beginning to fly off in directions that might seem obscure to those who haven't read the books (see "Harry Potter's First Date Flops, Quidditch Ditched: What 'Phoenix' Flick Leaves Out"). Working with the Polish cinematographer Slawomir Idziak ("Black Hawk Down"), he constructs some dazzling environments (like the black-lacquered halls of the Ministry of Magic, where interdepartmental memos go winging through the air like origami hummingbirds). Yates also creates some marvelous set-piece scenes — a fireworks attack on an Umbridge classroom, for instance, and a marvelous moment when the crusty "Mad-Eye" Moody (played again by Brendan Gleeson) commands an entire apartment building to slide apart from the center, revealing a hidden, magical residence within. The director has also brought back the Etonian robes and school ties that gave the early Potter movies such a rich British flavor. (Alfonso Cuarón, who directed the third film, started turning Harry and company into standard-issue teens-in-jeans.) In addition, the Gryffindor ghosts remain gone, which is good; and a welcome time-out has been called in the endless Hogwarts Quidditch games.

Yates has turned the longest of J.K. Rowling's Potter novels into the shortest of the movies so far (two hours and 18 minutes), and it was clearly a smart decision on the part of the producers to re-hire him early on to direct the next film, "Half-Blood Prince." Judging by this picture, that should be a lively enterprise, too. Let the can't-waiting begin.

Check out everything we've got on "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix."
Visit Movies on MTV.com for more from Hollywood, including news, reviews, interviews and more.
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Source : http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1564482/20070711/story.jhtml

Potter’s battlefield

Movies




Potter’s battlefield
Harry defends against the dark arts
In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) returns for his fifth year of study at Hogwarts.

To his dismay, Harry discovers that the wizarding community has been led to believe that the story of his recent encounter with the evil Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) is a lie.

Worse, Minister for Magic Cornelius Fudge (Robert Hardy), has appointed a new defense against the dark arts teacher, the duplicitous Professor Dolores Umbridge (Imelda Staunton).

Professor Umbridge’s course of defensive magic leaves the young wizards woefully unprepared to defend themselves against the dark forces threatening them.

At the prompting of his friends Hermione (Emma Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint), Harry is convinced to take matters into his own hands. Meeting secretly with a small group of students who name themselves Dumbledore’s Army, Harry teaches them how to defend themselves.

In the face of increasing danger, the courageous young wizards prepare for the battle that lies ahead.
The magic and mystery of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix hits theatres on July 12.

7/11/2550

Britney 'Praying' for Her Brokenhearted' Mom

"Everything is going to be fine."

So declares a sanguine Lynne Spears to People, just days after dingy daughter Britney made a paparazzi-documented production out of presenting her with a letter that purportedly warned her (per TMZ.com) to stay away from grandchildren Sean Preston, 21 months, and Jayden James, 9 months, if she is taking any medication that could impair her judgment.

"I've got a strong family," maintained Lynne, "and everything is going to be fine."
Britney, 25, however, doesn't seem to share her optimism.

"I'm praying for her right now," she saccharinely told a crush of shutterbugs on Sunday outside a Los Angeles sushi joint, before adding a pot-and-kettle-tinged potshot, "I hope she gets all the help she needs."

When asked about the chances of patching up the rift, Spears sing-songed, "In time, who knows what will happen?"

And while a hopeful Lynne has extended an invitation to her spiraling daughter to join the family in her hometown of Kentwood, La., for a Fourth of July celebration, it's likely she'll be a no-show.

"I don't know," Brit said of the possibility of returning home. "I like it here."

So just what prompted the T&A-flashing, umbrella-wielding, wonky weave-sporting fashion victim, who is facing mounting speculation that she's on the brink of another meltdown, to sever ties with the woman she once called her "role model"?

According to TMZ, Spears "feels totally betrayed" by Lynne, her almost-ex-husband Kevin Federline and fired manager Larry Rudolph (anyone see a wedge-driving pattern here?), whom she believes "railroaded" her into the swanky Promises treatment center in February.

Seems her simmering anger over the rehab stint has lately boiled over because she's convinced she never had a drug or alcohol problem (this, despite pre-check-in reports alleging she partied to the point of puking and passing out) and was instead dealing with "emotional problems" after the birth of Jayden. (TMZ says she recently called Promises and demanded her test results, which were supposedly clean.)

"I think Britney is angry that her family got involved in getting her into rehab," a source tells People, with another reiterating to Us, "She felt betrayed by her mom after she linked up with Kevin. Lynne just handed the kids over to Kevin -- and he got all the power."

Her suspicion over where her mother's loyalties lie apparently led to her ill-considered decision to hand-deliver the alleged warning to her on Thursday in full view of the press.

The New York Post reports Spears, after learning from the shutterbugs stationed outside her Beverly Hills, Calif., estate that she could find her mom with her still fresh-faced sister Jamie Lynn, 16, on the Valencia, Calif., set of "Zoey 101," loaded up her sons and, with bodyguards and photographers in tow, made the hour-long drive out to see her.

Upon arrival, Britney made a beeline for her mother, who was standing on the steps of a trailer. Amid that oh-so-appropriate milieu and with cameras rolling, she thrust the letter at Lynne, who sat down and perused the contents as her classy offspring picked a wedgie out of her indecent-exposure-inciting denim short-shorts.

Spears then jiggled her way back to her Mercedes and her sons, a seeming look of satisfaction on her face.

Too bad she failed to realize she could have made her point far better if she'd simply stuck a stamp on the missive and instead spent the day bonding with her babies, who will one day know they were dragged along on their mom's mission to alienate their grandma.

Another apparent downside to the trek: Sean and Jayden's mommy-and-me time may have taught them how to litter. A photographer for Splash News claims that on the drive home, "Britney kept throwing sandwich crusts and wrappers out of the window of her car. It was all very odd."

Britney's fury toward Lynne is quite a change from three years ago, when she gushed in a Letter of Truth that she "was and still is a Supermom."

Now, Mama Spears "is brokenhearted" and "has cried her heart out over the trouble between her and Britney," an insider tells People. "She wants her baby to be OK and to bring her grandkids home to Kentwood and raise them in a normal environment."

If by "normal" she means nightclub-free, that might not sit too well with her id-fueled daughter, who, despite her continued tussle with K-Fed over custody issues, appears unwilling to sacrifice any of her fun-time by prudently nesting with her tykes.

On Friday, she hit hot spot Les Deux, while a week earlier People spied her downing "rum-based" cocktails at a Los Angeles eatery.

X17.com, meanwhile, claims she's become "very good friends" with a moneyed mystery man, whom she's been "spending a lot of time hanging out with..."

And while Spears has kvetched loudly about taking back "control of my life" from those who were threatened when she began "to use my brain for a change," as she wrote in her May Letter of Truth, her new pal is supposedly steering some of her recent "business decisions."

For now, it remains unclear whether any of Brit's behavior will serve as legal fodder for Federline, who is reportedly holding off on signing the divorce papers.

" ... Kevin and his lawyer Mark Vincent Kaplan are dragging their heels out of concern over reports of Britney's post-rehab partying," a mole tells People, adding that Federline, who has kept an admirably low profile in the wake of the split, "wants to make sure that the divorce document makes it simple enough for [him] to downsize Britney's access to her kids the next time her behavior troubles him."




Source : http://entertainment.msn.com/music/hotgossip/7-02-07

7/09/2550

Potter fans to Rowling: Save Harry

Larry King LiveActor Daniel Radcliffe opens up to CNN's Larry King in an hour-long interview.

LONDON, England (Reuters) -- Thousands of Harry Potter fans have signed a petition urging J.K. Rowling to keep writing novels about the boy wizard after she admitted she could "never say never" to more books.

The "Save Harry!" petition calls on Rowling to reverse her decision to end the bestselling series with the seventh and final installment, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows."
"Millions, perhaps billions of us, love reading his adventures and we never want them to end," says the online petition, launched on Monday at www.saveharrypotter.co.uk.
After spending 17 years writing the books, Rowling said she was both "euphoric" and "devastated" that it's finally over.
But in a television interview, she left fans with the tantalizing, if remote, possibility that she may one day return to the magical world of Hogwarts.
"I think that Harry's story comes to quite a clear end in book seven," she told the BBC at the weekend. "But I have always said that I wouldn't say never.

"I can't say I will never write another book about that world, just because I think: 'What do I know, in 10 years' time I might want to return to it.' But I think it is unlikely."
Even if she does write another book, it is unclear whether some of the main characters, including Harry, would play a part. Rowling said some characters will die in the last book, but wouldn't say if the boy wizard is among them: "It's not a bloodbath, but it's more than two," she said.
Book retailer Waterstone's, which set up the petition, said Rowling could still write more Harry Potter books even if the title character is killed.
"Sir Arthur Conan Doyle famously killed off Sherlock Holmes, yet brought him back after years of demand from his fans and publishers," said Waterstone's Wayne Winstone. "Couldn't the same happen for Harry Potter?"

Rowling's publicist could not be reached for comment.
More than 325 million copies of the first six books have been sold worldwide, helping to make Rowling the first dollar-billionaire author. The final book is out on July 21.

7/07/2550

music
Live Earth Series Starts in Sydney

(Sydney, Australia) — Live Earth got a traditional Aboriginal welcome in Australia and a high-tech virtual one in Japan, as the 24-hour global concert series to raise awareness about climate change kicked off Saturday.

Al Gore made appearances at both — as a hologram in Tokyo and via live video link with Sydney�urging rock fans to join the fight against global warming.

Madonna, Metallica, the Police and Kanye West are among the top billed of more than 150 acts due to appear in the nine-concert series.

The biggest names will be at Live Earth concerts in London and New Jersey, with more modest lineups of mostly local and regional acts at the other venues. After Sydney and Tokyo, concerts will be held in Shanghai, China; Johannesburg, South Africa; Hamburg, Germany; London; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and New Jersey and Washington.

Aboriginal tribal leaders with white-painted bodies and shaking eucalyptus fronds were the first to take the stage at the Australian event, singing and dancing a traditional welcome to crowd that grew quickly from a few hundred midmorning to several thousand by around lunchtime.

Gore then invited the crowd to take Live Earth's seven-point pledge to reduce their personal environmental impact and support policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

"Thank you for coming today and thank you for being the very first to launch this movement to help solve the climate crisis," Gore said. "Enjoy the show."

Australian actress Toni Collette, taking a break from Hollywood to try her hand at a singing career, dedicated a song called "Cowboy Games" to world political leaders. Her band the Finnish ended their set with a grinding guitar-driven version of the 1970s T-Rex hit "Children of the Revolution."

"It's heartwarming to see so many people here today for the cause of going green," said Collette, who was Oscar-nominated for her role in "The Sixth Sense." "I take my hat off to you all."

Problems and changes to the series continued right down to the last minute, with a ninth concert�in Washington�added on Friday and a court battle continuing in Brazil to decide whether the show there could go ahead as planned.

Critics say that it lacks achievable goals, and that bringing in jet-setting rock stars in fuel-guzzling airliners to plug in to amplifier stacks and cranking up the sound may send mixed messages about energy conservation.

"The last thing the planet needs is a rock concert," The Who's singer Roger Daltrey recently told a British newspaper.

Organizers say the concerts will be as green as possible, with a tally of energy use being kept. Proceeds from ticket sales will go toward distributing power-efficient light bulbs and other measures that will offset the shows' greenhouse gas emissions, they say.

In Johannesburg, four-time Grammy nominee Angelique Kidjo offered a tart response to Daltrey's comment. "Criticism is easy," she said during a news conference Friday that involved performers in the local concert. "And there is a kind of fashion of cynical people around us. You are cynical�what the hell are you doing to change the world? Get your butt out there. Do something."

And it is beyond time to do so, she explained.

"Climate change is visible today, we can see that now. And if you can talk to farmers they will tell you that their crops that they are harvesting are not the same as before. That for me is a wake-up call because if we cannot eat, we cannot sustain ourselves. We don't eat cameras, we don't eat cars, we eat food."

Organizers were predicting live broadcasts on cable television and the Internet could reach up to 2 billion people. Scores of short films and public service announcements will be aired giving the audience tips about how to conserve energy and reduce their environmental impact.

Source : http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1640992,00.html

Live Earth rockers fight global warming



SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- Concerts in Sydney and Tokyo on Saturday kicked off 24 hours of music by more than 150 artists in a round-the-globe series of shows designed to raise awareness about climate change.



Former Vice President Al Gore, whose campaign to force global warming onto the international political stage inspired the concerts, made a live video appearance from Washington to open the first Live Earth show, on the other side of the world in Sydney.


He took the technology a step further a few hours later, appearing on stage in Tokyo as a hologram to deliver his message.


"Global warming is the greatest challenge facing our planet, and the gravest we've ever faced," Gore said. "But it's one problem we can solve if we come together as one and take action and drive our neighbors, businesses and governments to act as well. That's what live earth is all about."



For the most part, the diverse range of performers wholeheartedly backed the call, and the organizers promised the huge shows were eco-friendly by using recycled goods and buying carbon credits to offset the inevitable high power bills.


Madonna, Metallica, the Police and Kanye West were among the top-billed acts listed for the biggest concerts, in London and New Jersey, with more modest lineups of mostly local and regional acts at the other venues. Concerts also were being held in Shanghai, China; Johannesburg, South Africa; Hamburg, Germany; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Washington.



In Sydney, an estimated 50,000 people grooved through a set by former professional surfer-cum singer-guitarist Jack Johnson, banged their heads to afro-haired 1970s retro rockers Wolfmother, and awaited the first home performance in more than 10 years by reformed 1980s hitsters Crowded House.


Johnson made only one reference to the cause during his set -- referring the crowd to an environmental Web site -- though his songs were infused with fishing, surfing and a love of the outdoors.
Wolfmother's wild-haired Andrew Stockdale was more bombastic, in keeping with his Grammy-winning band's Deep Purple-style stadium rock aesthetic.


"Saviors of the world raise your hands," he shouted.


Aboriginal tribal leaders with white-painted bodies who shook eucalyptus fronds were the first to take the stage in Sydney, singing and dancing a traditional welcome to the sounds of a didgeridoo, a wind pipe made from a hollow tree branch.


The Tokyo concert kicked off with a high-tech, laser- and light-drenched performance by virtual-reality act Genki Rockets. Later, popular Japanese singer Ayaka urged fans to take up the concerts' theme of changing their daily habits as a first step to reducing global greenhouse gas emissions.


"I started to carry my own eco-bag so I don't have to use plastic grocery bags, and use my own chopsticks instead of disposable ones," she said.


Problems and changes to the series continued right down to the last minute, with a ninth concert -- in Washington, D.C. -- added on Friday and a court battle continuing in Brazil to decide whether the show there could go ahead as planned.


Critics say Live Earth lacks achievable goals, and that bringing in jet-setting rock stars in fuel-guzzling airliners to plug in amplifier stacks and cranking up the sound may send mixed messages about energy conservation.



Organizers say they're using biodiesel for power and recycled products where possible. Proceeds from ticket sales will go toward distributing power-efficient light bulbs and other measures to offset the shows' greenhouse gas emissions, they say.


Organizers were predicting live broadcasts on cable television and the Internet could reach up to 2 billion people, including public service announcements giving tips about how to conserve energy.



Source : http://www.cnn.com/2007/SHOWBIZ/Music/07/07/liveearth.ap/index.html

7/06/2550

The Simpsons Movie : Overview

The Simpsons Movie

They've kept television viewers laughing for nearly twenty years, and now the most popular animated family on the small screen makes the leap into theaters as Homer, Marge, Lisa, Bart, ad Maggie embark on their first ever feature-length adventure. Directed by David Silverman and written by a whole host of Simpsons veterans including Matt Groening and James L. Brooks, The Simpsons Movie also features special guest appearances by Albert Brooks among others. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide



.............................................


Dan Castellaneta
Actor
Born:1957

Forever associated with his ongoing voice work as Homer J. Simpson on Matt Groening and James L. Brooks' long, long-running Fox animated sitcom The Simpsons, Dan Castellaneta is well-reputed for his modest, unassuming presence in real life and his paradoxical ability to spin characters -- seemingly from out of nowhere -- that instantly take on lives of their own. Groening once famously remarked that "Dan can do everything, and he practically does....You might never notice him, but then he opens his mouth and he completely creates one character after another.''
Born in 1957, Castellaneta grew up in the small town of Oak Grove, IL, in the northwestern corner of the state, near the Iowa border. As a self-described introvert who developed and honed a facility for slipping into the guise of characters to entertain and make social situations easier (read: class clown), Castellaneta nevertheless diverged from this path in college and worked toward a career as a high-school art teacher via his studies at Northern Illinois University. Then, one of Castellaneta's professors (perhaps sensing some dissatisfaction) wisely admonished him to only work at a field, and in a job, that he loved. Castellaneta reasoned that acting fit the bill, and auditioned for the infamous sketch comedy troupe Second City shortly after graduation. The troupe hired him, and in time, the skills that the actor projected led to his involvement on the then-fledgling Fox network's sketch comedy series The Tracey Ullman Show, which premiered on Sunday, April 5, 1987. Castellaneta joined Ullman, Julie Kavner, Joe Malone, Sam McMurray, and for a time Anna Levine in live-action skits that parodied all aspects of Western culture.
As a most unusual aspect of her program, Ullman opted to feature crudely animated, offbeat segments as Monty Python-style transitions between the individual sketches. The episodes in question were drawn by Gabor Csupo and Groening (at that time, comic-strip artist of growing infamy known for his Life Is Hell series starring a buck-toothed, bug-eyed rabbit named Bucky). Although the subjects of the shorts initially varied, within a few months they began to focus exclusively on a hyper-dysfunctional blue-collar family called the Simpsons; Kavner and Castellaneta voiced parents Homer and Marge Simpson, respectively. Those segments gained such massive popularity that they eventually outshone that of the Ullman show itself (which wrapped in September 1990), and executive producer James L. Brooks, following this cue, decided to spin off the Simpsons into their own weekly animated series. Kavner and Castellaneta, of course, followed Brooks to the new program, joined in time by longtime Brooks acquaintance Harry Shearer, as well as Nancy Cartwright, Yeardley Smith, Hank Azaria, and numerous others.
The Simpsons premiered on Fox on December 17, 1989, and became not simply a hit but a phenomenon. It shot up to instantly become one of the highest-rated series on television, and attained iconic status. The program scored as a cause célèbre not simply with children (as expected) but with adult viewers as well, who appreciated the show's ability to skewer all aspects of society and culture. (It generated a billion-dollar marketing boom as well -- an onslaught of Bart Simpson-themed T-shirts, watches, dolls, beach towels, and everything else under the sun.) The program also drew an onslaught of celebrity guests -- everyone from Larry King to Tony Bennett to Beverly D'Angelo and Linda Ronstadt.
Castellaneta himself will forever be tied to Homer Simpson -- the lunkheaded, potbellied, beer-swilling, donut-loving nuclear-plant worker with not a whole lot upstairs, and a thoroughly crass lifestyle, but also a big, soft heart (a quality which Castellaneta's co-workers insist that he alone brought to the character). But hardcore Simpsons cultists and even its less attentive devotees will realize that Castellaneta voices not only Homer (as mentioned), but also the gravelly voiced, booze-swilling, womanizing clown Krusty; local drunk Barney Gumble; Scottish elementary-school groundskeeper Willie; the octogenarian family patriarch Grampa Simpson; and innumerable others. Certainly, it would be difficult to imagine a program that took fuller advantage of Castellaneta's versatility with characterizations.
Alongside The Simpsons, Castellaneta has also pursued a career as a live-action film and television performer, and spent most of the late '80s, '90s, and 2000s vacillating between the two mediums. His career on the big screen began at least a year prior to his involvement with Ullman and co., when he debuted with a bit part as Brian in the now-forgotten Garry Marshall dramedy Nothing in Common (1986), starring Jackie Gleason, Tom Hanks, Eva Marie Saint, and Sela Ward. In 1989, Castellaneta landed bit parts in two wildly different films: one as a maître d’ in the Jim Belushi cop comedy K-9, and another (as one of Danny DeVito's clients) in the James L. Brooks-produced jet-black marital farce The War of the Roses. Castellaneta temporarily withdrew from live-action cinematic work in the early '90s, before returning to audiences as the narrator in Super Mario Bros. (1993) and Phil in Warren Beatty's Love Affair (1994).
As the Castellaneta's career continued, he then segued into cinematic animated voice-over work (doubtless encouraged by the ongoing success of The Simpsons), doing voices in such features as 2000's Rugrats in Paris (under the aegis of old colleague Gabor Csupo) and Hey Arnold! The Movie (2002). In 2007, Castellaneta extended his Homer characterization to the big screen with his work on The Simpsons Movie -- the first cinematic appearance of Groening's famous animated family.
As for television, Castellaneta appeared as a supporting actor in numerous sitcoms during the 1990s. These included ALF (as Steve Michaels in the 1990 episode "Stayin' Alive"), Married...with Children (as Pete in the 1990 episode "The Dance Show"), Wings (as George Wexler in the 1994 episode "Moonlighting"), and Murphy Brown (as Tony Lucchesi in the 1995 episode "Specific Overtures.") He also voiced Genie (inheriting the role from Robin Williams) on the animated Aladdin TV series.
Of the Simpsons cast, Castellaneta is one of the only actors to regularly do on-stage comedic improvisation alongside his series work. He is married to Simpsons writer Deb Lacusta, whom he wed in 1987.


Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix : Synopsis

PG13,2hrs 19min
Genres:
Sci-Fi,Action,Drama,Family
Releases:
July 11, 2007
Director:
David Yates
Distributor:
Warner Bros. Pictures
Starring:
Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint

Young wizard-in-training Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe) returns to Hogwarts for his fifth year of studies, only to find that the magical community seems to be in a curious state of denial about his recent encounter with the sinister Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) in the fifth installment of the popular fantasy film series based on the best-selling books by author J.K. Rowling. Rumor has it that the dreaded Lord Voldemort has returned, but Minister for Magic Cornelius Fudge (Robert Hardy) isn't so sure what to make of all the hearsay currently floating around the campus of Hogwarts. Suspecting that Headmaster Albus Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) may be fueling the rumors regarding Voldemort's return in order to undermine his authority and lay claim to his job, Fudge entrusts newly arrived Defense Against the Dark Arts professor Dolores Umbridge (Imelda Staunton) with the task of tracking Dumbledore and keeping a protective watch over the nervous student body. The young wizards of Hogwarts will need something much more effective than Umbridge's Ministry-approved course in defensive magic if they are to truly succeed in the extraordinary battle that lies ahead, however, and when the administration fails to provide the students with the tools that they will need to defend Hogwarts against the fearsome powers of the Dark Arts, Hermione (Emma Watson), Ron (Rupert Grint), and Harry take it upon themselves to recruit a small group of students to form "Dumbledore's Army" in preparation for the ultimate supernatural showdown.


Photo :







Source : http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie.aspx?m=547474&mp=syn

Nick & Vanessa's X-Rated Romp?


For a guy who spent years being trailed by a camera crew from MTV, Nick Lachey still appears to have a thing or two to learn about keeping his private life -- and private parts -- private.
TMZ.com reports the square-jawed crooner, 33, and girlfriend Vanessa Minnillo, 26, are trying to put the kibosh on photos showing them in flagrante delicto -- and how -- while soaking in a hot tub during a recent getaway to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
A source says the salacious snaps are "Paris sex tape-level scandalous," which we assume means Nick and 'Nessa look really, really bored as they get it on. Another indelicate detail that takes us to a scary visual place: The flexible flames were apparently captured in a variety of positions.
The risqué revelation comes on the heels of Lachey and Minnillo's skin-tastic appearance in the latest issue of Life & Style, which features censored images of the swimsuit- and tan line-eschewing twosome de-toweling before climbing into the Jacuzzi for a smooch session.
"His family is not going to be happy," a pal told the magazine of the au naturel shots. "This isn't the kind of stuff they want to see."
(Hey, we're right there with 'em -- and doubly so for the far more intimate images.)
TMZ says Nick and Vanessa, who recently took heat for photos showing her engaged in some knife play with Lindsay Lohan, have sicced pitbull attorney Marty Singer on would-be photo revealers.
The lawyer, who calls the paparazzo's actions "outrageous and malicious," has warned the tabloids that a lawsuit will ensue if pictures of the lovebirds' alleged lovemaking are published.
"The photos that were taken of our clients by a Mexican photographer violated Mexican law and were a clear invasion of privacy," he rails to TMZ, "and we have threatened to take legal action against third parties who publish the photos."
Lachey, for his part, is taking the erotic exposure in stride."Where's the scandal?" he maintains to OK! magazine. "I was in Mexico with my girlfriend of a year, celebrating our anniversary on a private vacation. It's not like I was caught with a Mexican hooker. We've all gone out and had a few too many and done something stupid. We've all made mistakes."


7/05/2550

Boys Who Like Toys

He's one of the most powerful taste-makers in Hollywood, the guy behind the record-breaking success of 300, the hit status of NBC's Heroes and the reign of the Xbox 360 gaming console. He enjoys invitations to the Skywalker Ranch and hangs out with guys like Nicolas Cage and Quentin Tarantino at conventions. He's zealously loyal, notoriously finicky and often aggressive with those who dare to disagree with him.

Oh, and occasionally he likes to dress up as Spider-Man.
He is the fanboy, the typically geeky 16-to-34-year-old male (though there are some fangirls) whose slavish devotion to a pop-culture subject, like a comic-book character or a video game, drives him to blog, podcast, chat, share YouTube videos, go to comic-book conventions and, once in a while, see a movie on the subject of his obsession. And he's having his way with Hollywood.

Exhibit A is Transformers, the summer's most anticipated movie event that doesn't end in a number, in which the hero will be played by Peter Cullen, a Canadian voice actor familiar to the teensiest fraction of moviegoers. With Steven Spielberg producing and Michael Bay directing this $150 million effects-ravaganza about dueling alien robot races, the protagonist could have been Will Smith or magazine-cover bait like Justin Timberlake. But Cullen was the voice of the character Optimus Prime in the Transformers TV show, a treasured part of the canon for true fans. (If the phrase "robots in disguise" sets your toes atappin', you may be one of them).

These alpha fans are enjoying an unprecedented era of influence, through blogs, podcasts and movie-news sites that have become trusted sources of movie information for millions of filmgoers. And not just on casting decisions. "They're the new tastemakers," says Avi Arad, a producer behind this summer's Spider-Man 3 and Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer. "Hard-core fans represent a small piece of the viewing public, but they influence geek culture, journalists, Wall Street. You don't want them to trash your project." If these fans embrace a project, as they did 300 and Heroes, they can kick-start a hit.

Who are they? Typically they're like John Campea, 35, of Toronto, who founded The Movie Blog as a hobby in 2003 while working at a visual-effects company, or Josh Tyler, 30, a design engineer from Dallas who has built an audience of 1 million for his site Cinemablend by being one of the more cleverly critical fanboys. (Of this summer's Bratz, he posted, "It's kind of like Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants if the pants were a miniskirt worn without undergarments.") Or they're like Berge Garabedian, 33, of Montreal, who put his M.B.A. toward founding JoBlo.com after critics trashed Armageddon, a movie he and all of his friends loved. They're guys who love--obsessively--certain types of movies. "There are a lot more people who identify with me, a film fan, than a film expert," says Campea. "I'm the guy who stands at the watercooler with everybody." The watercooler is getting crowded. Now Campea has so much traffic on his site that income from Google ads pays a decent salary for him and two other writers.

The phenomenon started long, long ago (1977) in a galaxy far, far away (San Diego) when a then little-known director named George Lucas attended an intimate comic-book convention to promote a movie called Star Wars. Lucas' films have since become a gateway drug for a generation of movie addicts. And Comic-Con, the San Diego convention of genre buffs, has become a Hollywood must-attend event, albeit one where dressing to impress means dry cleaning your Darth Vader costume. It's significant that this fanboy Christmas happens not in Hollywood but two hours south. The appeal of the species is that they're outsiders to the movie industry and are therefore able to retain a sense of awe about it. At the same time, they're outsiders in the real world, caring passionately about subjects most people shrug off--like who will play Spock in the 2008 Star Trek prequel. In search of kindred souls, they turn to the Web.

Comic-Con remains a force, especially for movies like 300, which has shocked the industry by grossing more than $450 million worldwide so far. Although it's based on a Frank Miller comic book, "it wasn't even on our radar," says JoBlo's Garabedian. He dispatched a couple of writers to check out the few minutes of footage that producers were showing at the conference in 2006. "The writers came back to our room, and they couldn't even talk." And just like that, the movie about the ancient Greek battle of Thermopylae with no stars and unusual stylized visuals became the talk of the convention. Six months later, it premiered at Butt-Numb-a-Thon, an Austin, Texas, film festival curated by Harry Knowles of Ain't It Cool News (AICN). Most mainstream media critics trounced it, but 60% of the males who bought tickets on opening weekend said they were drawn by seeing references to the movie on the Web, where readers of sites like Garabedian's and Knowles' were frenetically discussing it.
No one is really sure how many alpha fans there are. As the first movie-fan website to get a toehold, AICN has more traffic than the websites of established media like ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY or Variety. The top eight movie-fan websites have a total of 6 million to 8 million unique users a month. And unlike that of many news sites, which are weekday coffee-break reads, the fan sites' traffic peaks on weekends, when visitors are making decisions about what movies to see. Writer-director Kevin Smith, who has a top-rated podcast--and a Ms. Pac-Man machine!--believes fanboys deserve all the credit for the $26 million that Clerks II earned at the box office last year, five times what the film cost. "Had I not gotten onto the Internet in 1995, I doubt I'd still be working," he says. "You create personal relationships with these people who are essentially your employers." In a nod to his fan base, one of the characters in Clerks II is a 19-year-old Transformers-obsessed virgin.
Of course, another movie that fanboys were panting about at Comic-Con was last summer's Snakes on a Plane, which New Line Cinema pumped to the Web audience but declined to screen for mainstream critics. "We thought it was a stupid title, but we wanted to see it," says Garabedian. "There was swearing, snakes biting into breasts." But the fanboys are outsiders for a reason: the rest of America doesn't always share their taste. And the poor performance of Grindhouse, the double feature from two fanboy deities, directors Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez, shows that fanboy love can get you only so far. Plenty of people heard about the movie--a three-hour '70s-exploitation-style gorefest--but decided it was an inside joke they weren't going to get. "There's this perception that the geeks have inherited the earth," says Smith, "but if they had, Grindhouse would have grossed $100 million. It plays to a marginalized culture." A marginalized culture with a big stick. When Disney tried to market the sweetly sad Bridge to Terabithia as the next Narnia, the Web was awash with fanboy invective, not for the film but for the trailer's misleading emphasis on fantasy. In the end Terabithia did respectably with family audiences, earning more than $100 million worldwide, but it didn't pull in the nearly $300 million that Narnia did.

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While the best-known fanboys, including Knowles and Garabedian, are caressed by the studios, which invite them to events and film sets and even have publicity divisions to work especially with them, the fanboy effect is most pronounced for smaller-budget releases like Smith's. Shaun of the Dead, 2004's romantic comedy with zombies, became a sleeper hit when horror buffs embraced its zombie-movie in-jokes and morbid humor. Simon Pegg, 37, the British comic who co-wrote Shaun and plays the film's lovelorn zombie hunter, remembers wishing he had someone with whom to share the joy of cinematic subtext when he first saw E.T. in 1982. In one scene, Spielberg dropped in the music from Lucas' The Empire Strikes Back. "I remember wanting to stand up in the theater and say, 'Did you just hear that?!'" says Pegg, whose new film, Hot Fuzz, provides similar moments for fans of buddy-cop movies like Bad Boys II. Other fanboys who have gone on to work in the business include Spider-Man director Sam Raimi; the two Transformers writers, Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci; and David Arquette, who showed up for a screening of the horror film he wrote and directed, The Tripper, in a fake-blood-spattered suit. "I can relate more to people at a horror convention than I can to most Hollywood executives," says Arquette. "They're more passionate."

Being a fan helps with the tricky business of winning over fanboys of established franchises, who tend to be a protective bunch. When Chris Weitz was tapped to direct this fall's His Dark Materials: The Golden Compass, an adaptation of the first book in Philip Pullman's fantasy series, starring Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig, the About a Boy director made the mistake of going online and reading a poll of fan reaction. "I had just barely beaten 'nobody' as the person who would be the best director for the series," says Weitz, who eventually invited some fans onto the set and proved his fanboy bona fides. Of course, the problem with catering to diehards is the potential for being held prisoner by them creatively. "That can paralyze you when you're trying to invent a new thing," says Orci, who ultimately decided that as crazy Transformers fans, he and Kurtzman could trust themselves to fiddle with the original and still preserve what they loved about it.

Although studios are courting the top fanboys now, it wasn't always thus. AICN created a sport of snagging scoops--reviews from test screenings of unfinished films, scripts, artwork--that put Hollywood on the defensive. All that's over now. Indeed, the kind of insider status some enjoy may threaten the biggest asset the fanboys have as far as their audiences go--the fact that they're just movie-obsessed nerds like their readers. But you can't put the genie back into the bottle. The lads have become such objects of fascination for the industry that it has paid the group its ultimate compliment. The movie Fanboys comes out Aug. 17.


Source : http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1612687,00.html

Stars heading for divorce court

Stars heading for divorce court
LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Two Hollywood stars will be going to divorce court to end their marriages of 12 and eight years, respectively.

Johnny Knoxville, who has been married for 12 years, has filed for divorce from his wife.
The "Jackass" star, whose birth name is Philip John Clapp, cites "irreconcilable differences" as the reason for ending his marriage to Melanie Lynn Clapp, according to documents filed Tuesday in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Knoxville, 36, is seeking joint custody of their 11-year-old daughter, Madison.

The couple separated in July 2006.

Knoxville starred in "The Dukes of Hazzard," "Men In Black II" and the "Jackass" franchise, which includes the MTV stunt shows and their movie versions.

Meanwhile, Wayne Brady and wife Mandie are splitting after eight years.

In filing for divorce, Mandie Brady cites "irreconcilable differences" as the reason for ending their marriage, according to court documents filed Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court. She is seeking joint legal and physical custody of their 4-year-old daughter, Maile.

The couple wed in 1999, but separated in April 2006, the papers said.

A message left after business hours Tuesday with the comedian's publicist was not immediately returned.
Wayne Brady, 35, won two Daytime Emmy awards for hosting "The Wayne Brady Show." He has also won an Emmy Award for his performance on the improvisational comedy game show "Whose Line Is It Anyway?"

Movie : "Transformers" take over U.S. box offices

"Transformers" take over U.S. box offices

"Transformers," a special-effects movie extravaganza based on popular toys, earned $27.5 million during its first full day of release and appears on track to dominate the weekend box office, according to estimates on Wednesday by distributor Paramount Pictures.

After earning $8.8 million from Monday night screenings across the United States and Canada, the movie pulled in $27.5 million the next day -- a sum billed by Paramount as the biggest Tuesday haul for a movie.
Directed by Michael Bay, a filmmaker known for such spectacles such as "Armageddon" and "Pearl Harbor," "Transformers" is based on the Hasbro Inc. toys that turn into alien robots.

In the film, relative unknowns Shia LaBeouf and Megan Fox star as youngsters befriended by Autobots, the good aliens who are being battled by the evil Decepticons.

Despite its success, "Transformers"' take falls considerably short of the one-day record of $59.8 million set by "Spider-Man 3" two months ago, on a Friday.

The previous record for a Tuesday was set last month, when "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" earned $15.7 million, according to Viacom Inc.-owned Paramount.

Last weekend's champion, Walt Disney Co.'s "Ratatouille," earned $7.9 million on Tuesday, according to data supplied by a rival studio. A Disney official was not immediately available for comment. Because of the July 4 holiday in the United States, most studios did not report midweek figures.

The only other new Tuesday release was "License To Wed." Data for the critically maligned Robin Williams comedy will be issued on Sunday, according to the film's distributor, Warner Bros. The studio is a unit of Time Warner Inc.

Source : http://movies.yahoo.com/mv/news/va/20070704/118358775900.html

7/03/2550

Film : Filming Texas in a Good Light

By HILARY HYLTON/AUSTIN

Director Robert Rodriguez,
on the set of Grindhouse.
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Back in the early 80s, the hit series Dallas kept the nation guessing with its season-ending cliffhanger Who Shot J.R.? Now, with a film version of Dallas starring John Travolta in development, the more appropriate question could be, Where to Shoot J.R.? If the filmmakers hope to tap into a new $22 million Texas fund aimed at boosting the state's film and computer-game industry, they'll have to agree to a controversial caveat, which denies support to any creative project that "portrays Texas or Texans in a negative fashion."
Could J.R. Ewing be a deal killer? That is the sort of question Bob Hudgins, head of the Texas Film Commission, will have to grapple with when the new funding law kicks in this fall. The commission will review movie scripts and game design plans before approving up to a 5% rebate of a film's Texas-based costs (up to a maximum of $2 million) or a $250,000 grant for a game design project; the project must have 80% of its work done within the state, and the money that will only be rewarded after it is completed. "We are going to look at the total film, not just one scene," Hudgins said. "We are going to use our best judgment." A veteran of the film industry, Hudgins said he is sensitive to industry concerns — "I take this responsibility very, very seriously," he said — but he notes it is quite normal for other kinds of grants to come with conditions.

About 40 states have film industry incentives, and most block funding for films deemed obscene, but the broad language of the Texas law has raised First Amendment concerns for the Motion Picture Association of America. "It has serious constitutional overtones," Vans Stevenson, senior vice president for state government affairs, said. The MPAA also is watching a North Carolina bill now before the Senate Finance Committee that would limit film tax credits to those films that have "serious artistic merit" and also mandates consideration of the "general standards of decency and respect for the diverse beliefs and values of the citizens of North Carolina." The amendment was prompted by outrage of some conservative politicians over the filming of Hounddog in North Carolina, the dark 2006 drama which featured a rape scene involving then 12-year-old actress Dakota Fanning.
Before the Texas bill was signed earlier this month on an Austin sound stage, the MPAA urged Gov. Rick Perry in a letter to veto the legislation. "Motion pictures made in the United States are the most popular form of entertainment worldwide because filmmakers are free to tell stories on film without fear of government censorship." Perry dismissed such concerns, saying censorship was "not going to happen" in Texas. But Stevenson warns that the caveat will backfire and hurt the Texas' effort to woo back film business it has been losing to other states, which have passed more generous tax credit and incentive programs.

In the past, the state had relied on its popularity with directors like Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, Richard Linklater and Ron Howard, while touting its professional film industry labor force, a growing number of sound stages and its geographic diversity. But in the last four years, 32 film projects — including Ghost Rider starring Nicolas Cage and Billy Bob Thornton's The Astronaut Farmer — that had initially expressed interest ended up choosing other locations. Adding insult to injury — an estimated $327 million in spending and 4,600 jobs — 12 of the films had Texas story lines, according to the state's film commisison. Professional crews who had settled in Austin, Dallas and Houston now found themselves working in Shreveport, where a generous Louisiana tax credit increased film industry projects by 300% in three years. "Ten years ago, we were in the top five, now we are down the list — still in the top 20," Hudgins said. "We haven't lost it yet, but this could be a make or break year."
With the legislature meeting only for a few months every two years, passing an incentive package this spring was considered vital. But supporters didn't take into account the lingering resentment of the movie Glory Road, the inspirational tale of the Texas Western Miners, the first all-black college basketball team to win a national championship. In one of the movie's game scenes, the Miners played East Texas University, now Texas A&M-Commerce, and Aggies were enraged at their depiction as racist. While the Miners were derided and experienced racism during their rise to glory, the depiction of Aggie fans as racist was historically inaccurate, critics said; Hudgins said the movie used poetic license in the scene to symbolize several real incidents. With Aggie sensibilities so offended, state senate finance committee chairman Steve Ogden, a Republican whose district includes Texas A&M University, plugged in the conditions clause and no amount of lobbying by a mobilized Texas film industry could dislodge it.

"I wasn't happy with the language, but overall I don't think its going to be a problem," said Dallas producer and filmmaker Todd Sims. The director of the award-winning 2005 independent movie Echoes of Innocence, Sims said any measure of control over content can be a slippery slope, but passage of an incentive bill was critical to the Texas film industry. "No one is saying you can't shoot a movie in Texas that makes Texas look bad. All we are saying is you are not going to get a grant," Sims said. And regardless of content, all filmmakers will be able to avail themselves of the state's generous sales tax exemption on production costs.

The funding bill backers also included some of the most influential leaders of the computer game industry, including the legendary Richard Garriott, known by game fans as "Lord British," who now heads Korean giant NCsoft's Austin design company. NCsoft is just one of the 80 game developers in Texas, which is the third biggest game development center in the country, behind only California and Washington. "There is an intersection between the film industry and the game industry. Especially in animation there is a huge crossover in the workforce," said Katy Daiger, the film commission's liaison to the game design industry. In terms of economic development, Garriott said, the game design industry has a greater impact than film and it boasts a workforce that any city would want to attract — permanent, creative, well-educated and high earning.

But for some conservative politicians the game design industry has been all about violence and headlines, which is why the funding restrictions ultimately included it as well as the film business. "I actually tend to agree, in general," Garriott said. "The state does not need to be supporting pornography. If it clearly besmirched the state, the public would be outraged that it was funded with Texas dollars." What is more important to Garriott is the acknowledgment of the growing importance of his industry, even if a $250,000 grant won't pay for too much in a business where a new game can cost more than $10 million to develop.

Not all filmmakers, however, are so understanding, and the MPAA believes the film incentives will ultimately end up in court. While the MPAA is not planning a lawsuit, in its letter to Gov. Perry the industry group cited a long list of appellate cases supporting their position. David Kendall, the noted First Amendment attorney with the Washington-based firm Williams and Connolly, said the Texas law is not only vague, but may run afoul of First Amendment protections. "I think if the state benefit is conditional or can be revoked, it is plainly unconstitutional since the First Amendment prevents content discrimination," Kendall said, adding puckishly: "The reputation of Texans does not need legal protection beyond the state."